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Fall 11-3-2014 Maine Campus November 03 2014 Maine Campus Staff

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Repository Citation Staff, Maine Campus, "Maine Campus November 03 2014" (2014). Maine Campus Archives. 5210. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainecampus/5210

This Other is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine Campus Archives by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FREE Monday, November 3, 2014 mainecampus.com The Maine Campus The University of Maine student newspaper since 1875 Vol. 133, No. 8

Sports Culture Opinion Men’s Ice Hockey sweeps UMass B1 University Singers welcome new director A12 The balance between rights and safety in Ebola case A6 Ebola not a threat to UMaine Emergency management systems in place to keep students safe, though some vigilence is needed

Cameron Paquette News Editor

There have been several diseases over the last half de- cade that have drawn national concern. The Avian infuenza and H1N1, otherwise known as the Swine fu, came and went without developing into the serious pandemics that they could have been. The latest of these, Ebola, has caused quite a stir. In light of the recent con- troversy in Fort Kent regard- ing Kaci Hickox, a nurse who returned to the town from treating Ebola patients in Si- erra Leone and was placed on quarantine despite testing negative for the disease, Uni- versity of Maine at Fort Kent President Wilson Hess has taken steps to calm the fears of students by announcing the university’s compliance with new protocols from the Cen- ters for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) aimed at halting the spread of Ebola. “The University of Maine at Fort Kent is proud of our nursing program and our stu- dents’ commitment to public UMaine student Moie Aaskov dons a medical mask signifying 2014 as the year of the Ebola scare. Aley Lews, Photo Editor health and safety,” Hess said in a press release. “We will opted and implemented the “We really jumped on In the case of an emergen- “Regardless of whether “It’s not just Ebola, it’s take every appropriate step National Incident Manage- this bandwagon earlier than cy, either Maines or Univer- it’s Wayne or the police, we’d infuenza. Remember H1N1 within established CDC pro- ment System and Incident anybody else,” said Wayne sity of Maine Police Depart- expect the same commands,” a couple years ago? It’s the tocols to protect our campus Command System, which Maines, UMaine’s director ment Chief Roland LaCroix said Auxiliary Operation Di- same structure we used then,” while offering our support allows them to communicate of Safety and Environmen- take command, forming a rector Dick Young of the Cut- Maines said. “A lot of proce- and compassion to those af- and work with state agen- tal Management. “When [the chain of leadership that works ler Health Center. dures we developed for H1N1 fected by travel to parts of the cies as well as other college 2007 shooting at] Virginia to identify and resolve the sit- As for Ebola, Maines have been dusted off and world where outbreaks have campuses in the case of an Tech happened, colleges and uation. With this type of sys- stresses that there is no risk looked at, and they’re ready occurred.” emergency. This pertains to universities started thinking tem, everybody is trained in for students at Orono. to go.” To combat threats from anything from an outbreak to about emergency manage- every role so that if people are “We’re not at risk, but we Ebola, which was discov- diseases such as Ebola, the school shootings and weather ment in a new way. We were missing in action, they can be plan for everything,” Maines University of Maine has ad- disasters. already doing it.” replaced by a backup. said. See Ebola on A3 UMaine to research ‘trashanol’ An academic loss: Putting USM’s program cuts in perspective

Jocelyn Nerney ness deal in English, but you Staff Writer want to be able to go out and have a glass of wine and un- On Friday, Oct. 24, the derstand the jokes. You also University of Maine Sys- want to be aware of what tem’s board of trustees vot- your competition may be ed to cut two academic pro- offering around the table if grams from the University there are different providers, of Southern Maine’s curric- and they are able to speak UMaine researchers are looking a way to turn piles of garbage into reusable energy. Courtesy of Charley Lhasa ulum: undergraduate French the language, you want to be and graduate Applied Med- able to know what they are Buck Johnson The PERC plant pres- the University of Maine’s organics frst and then anoth- ical Sciences, according to saying,” Smith said. Contributor ently burns the majority of Forest Bioproducts Re- er way to deal with the recy- the Bangor Daily News. If you do not understand waste collected in the area. search Institute to study the clables,” Stuart-Paul said. Professor Jane Smith, the language, you have to The Municipal Review This burning creates ener- garbage-to-energy known Traditionally, all organ- chair of the Department rely on the good will of the Committee (MRC) is part- gy which is used by Emera as Fiberight. Fiberight has ic matter in trash in either of Modern Languages and people you are talking to, nering with the University Maine as part of a three de- approached the MRC about burned or place into landflls. Classics and associate pro- Smith said, regarding con- of Maine to research an en- cade long contract between establishing a plant in the Pe- Fiberight, however, plans fessor of French, provided tracts and business deals in ergy solution which involves the two companies. Current- nobscot region which would to use enzyme technology insight on the importance the world. turning garbage into energy ly, the contract is favorable turn garbage into energy, but to turn the organic materi- of the French and other lan- Smith explained the known as “Trashanol.” to PERC as it receives $0.16 in a different, more proftable als into engineered fuels. guage programs at UMaine. importance of the French The MRC is a non-prof- for every kilowatt hour it pro- way than is currently being Fiberight operates a demon- “The loss of the program program for the universi- it organization which leads duces. Once the contract ends performed by the PERC. stration plant in Lawrencev- at USM is sad and trag- ty, community and the state the trash disposal interests in 2018 this rate is expected Fiberight Chief Executive ille, Virginia that is used to ic. Overall it waters down overall. of over 180 communities in to drop to between $0.04- Craig Stuart-Paul spoke with turn municipal solid waste what’s offered,” Smith said. “It’s quite signifcant Penobscot County and sur- $0.06 per kilowatt hour. For the Orono Town Council in into ethanol, biogas or com- “It seems to refect the because of Maine’s ties to rounding areas. The group’s the past fve years the MRC July about his company’s pressed natural gas. The com- attitude that so much of the French-speaking Canada trash is currently disposed by has been searching for an unique waste disposal meth- pany created and copyrighted world is able to speak En- with the Franco- Ameri- the Penobscot Energy Recov- alternate source of energy in ods. the term Trashanol for their glish so we don’t really need can population of the state, ery Company (PERC). The anticipation of the impending “We have an organic solu- fuel products. to teach languages, but that’s which is at least one-third if PERC operates a waste-to-en- contract coming to an end. tion — rather than burning Orono town manager, So- not true at all,” Smith said. not more, so people’s roots ergy plant in Orrington and is The MRC has agreed to [waste] … let’s come up with “You may be able to ne- part owned by the MRC. spend $20,000 to employ a solution that deals with the See Trash on A3 gotiate the contract or busi- See USM on A4

Tuesday High: 40° Wednesday High: 48° Thursday High: 44° Friday High: 52° Saturday High: 44° Sunday High: 45° Low: 33° Low: 35° Low: 41° Low: 42° Low: 31° Low: 33°

Police Beat - A5 Opinion - A6 Diversions - A8 Reviews - A11 Culture - A12 Sports - B1 A2 • News The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014 Students, professors share research at annual Maine Neuroscience Conference Chase Brunton England in Biddeford and Roy and the other students could potentially beneft ed- son Laboratory and the MDI chology, biology, biochem- Staff Writer a program on neuroscience on his research team hope to ucation and industry. Biological Lab. istry and animal science. outreach. Talks were given use what they fnd to erase “People in industry, edu- Alan Rosenwasser, pro- Research in his lab fo- On Saturday, Nov. 1, the in two separate blocks in these cognitive defcits. cation, and things like that fessor of psychology at cuses on animal models University of Maine hosted the morning and afternoon, Steve Hutchinson, a are always looking for ways UMaine and president of of alcoholism, including a statewide neuroscience with the rest of the pro- graduate student at UMa- to improve cognitive perfor- the Maine chapter of the the effects of alcohol use conference at Wells Confer- grams occurring in between ine studying experimental mance for their employees SFN, helped organize the on sleep and biological ence Center. the talks. psychology with a focus on and students,” the psychol- event. According to him, rhythms. The day-long event was Students working in in addition to allowing re- Rosenwasser has been organized by the Maine labs at different institutions searchers (students and fac- president of the Maine Chapter of the Society for shared their work with oth- “Not only do students get to experience ulty) to share their research chapter of the Society for Neuroscience (SFN) and er students, researchers, and with other like-minded in- Neuroscience for the last featured presentations by the general public. Several presenting a poster or giving a talk, but by dividuals, these kinds of three years. He is a profes- students and faculty on a were present from the Uni- getting to see professional level scientists conferences offer students sor of psychology at UMa- range of topics in neuro- versity of Maine to share presenting their research, they can get a the chance to present their ine, and a cooperating fac- science and other related their projects. sense of what they’re aspiring toward.” work in a relatively infor- ulty member in the school felds. Tyler Roy, a 22-year-old mal, low-key and friendly of biology and ecology, the Students and facul- undergraduate psychology Alan Rosenwasser environment. Graduate School of Bio- ty from colleges and labs student at UMaine, is study- Professor of psychology, University of Maine “Not only do students logical Sciences (GSBS), across Maine converged at ing the degenerative cogni- get to experience presenting and the University of New the conference, the fourth tive effects of chemothera- a poster or giving a talk, but England’s Center for Excel- since the establishment of py on the brains of mice as cognitive psychology, re- ogy student said. by getting to see profession- lence in the Neurosciences. the Maine Chapter of the part of his capstone. searched the effect of stress Other schools represent- al level scientists presenting Rosenwasser and others SFN, to present their re- “Patients with cancer on cognitive performance in ed at the event included: their research, they can get decided to bring this year’s search projects. who undergo chemotherapy mice. In an experiment, he the University of Maine at a sense of what they’re as- conference to UMaine about The day’s events includ- usually experience cognitive and other students studied Presque Isle, Husson Uni- piring toward,” Rosenwass- a year ago, at the end of the ed talks by students and defcits than can last months how stress can affect cogni- versity in Bangor, the Uni- er said. last conference, which took faculty, as well as poster to years to the rest of their tion not just during a stress- versity of New England in In his lab in Little Hall, place at Colby College. presentations, a lecture by life,” Roy said. Working ful event, but also over time. Biddeford and Colby Col- Rosenwasser has worked The event ran from 8:30 a professor of pharmacolo- in Thane Fremouw’s lab in He pointed to the implica- lege in Waterville. Present- with graduate and under- a.m. to 5:15 p.m., and was gy at the University of New the psychology department, tions of the project, which ers also came from the Jack- graduate students in psy- free for students. Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine Campus News • A3

Ebola comes in and answers positive from A1 to that question, now we have a procedure where that person UMPD’s latest gadget: Electric will be taken to a different lo- ered in West Africa in 1976, is cation and isolated from the a virus spread through direct rest of the clinic and imple- contact with the bodily fuid ment our plan as to who’s in motorcycle gets rave reviews of someone who’s infected. command,” Young said. As of Oct. 29, this outbreak In this case, the patient will has 13,567 reported cases be brought to Eastern Maine resulting in 4,922 deaths. Medical Center (EMMC) Since its entry into the Unit- where they will be treated in ed States, there has been only isolation in order to minimize one fatality. contact with other people as It typically takes 21 days much as possible. In addition, for someone infected with Eb- the CDC would be notifed so ola to show symptoms, which that they can monitor the situ- tend to mimic the common ation and direct employees at fu in the early stages. Even EMMC on how to best handle if someone has Ebola, they things. cannot spread it if they are not The CDC also keeps a re- themselves exhibiting symp- cord of different diseases and toms. their presence in different ar- Due to the public concern eas of the country based on over the disease and the sim- reported cases. ilarity in onset to the fu, the “[The CDC] know where CDC has made recommenda- there’s outbreaks. They know tions to the nation’s health in- where certain [diseases] are stitutions on how to handle a because doctors offces and case of someone coming into medical facilities are required a facility with Ebola. to report those,” Young said. According to Young, the “[The CDC] puts out reports, team at Cutler Health Center so we’re aware of those things have adopted protocols for that are emerging around [us]. dealing with potential Ebo- “We know where they Zero Motorcycles manufactures a variety of electronic bikes, including the UMPD ride Courtesy of Green Car Reports la patients and have a plan are around us, and they help worked out with Eastern guide us so the clinicians who Kyle Hadyniak 600-700 pound Harley mo- es the motorcycle’s ability to ual assault reports,” Mercier Maine Medical Center in the are seeing people can make Staff Writer torcycles. As it doesn’t use regenerate the battery when said. “It is like a small city. case of a quarantine. [certain symptoms] more of gas, the motorcycle must be braking, and Eco, which re- These vehicles allow us to “All students are asked a a diagnosis cue when people The University of Maine charged using either a reg- duces the motorcycle’s ac- operate in a safer manner. We travel question at the door,” come in,” Young said. Police Department (UMPD) ular electrical wall outlet, celeration and top speed but are only as good as the tools Young said. Maines and Young urge is nearing completion of a which charges the motor- increases regeneration. Fur- we use, and luckily we have “If they’re exhibiting any students experiencing fu- two-week electronic motor- cycle in about seven hours, thermore, the motorcycle’s some pretty good tools.” symptoms when they come like symptoms to go to Cutler cycle loan. While temporary, or an express charger, which Eco settings can be custom- The department also uses in, and they’re negative on Health Center and get checked the motorcycle represents can charge the bike in three ized using a Bluetooth smart- other vehicles, such as the those [travel] questions, we out, as well as to practice pre- the latest in the department’s hours. phone application. Segway-esque one-person treat them like a fu patient… ventative measures such as tech-centric equipment. Offcer Joseph Everett The motorcycle, while T-3s, used mainly by park- If we have someone who safe hygiene and cleanliness. The $22,000 2013 Zero has the most experience with temporary, is the latest in ing services. However, the DS ZF11.4 motorcycle is the motorcycle than anyone UMPD’s use of high-tech police department occasion- completely gas- and oil-free, during the vehicle’s two- vehicles. The police cruis- ally uses these vehicles for Trash produce salt from the waste making it an entirely green week loan, and he offered ers, the latest of which is a football games and other from A1 which could be used on the machine that still preserves unanimous praise for the mo- 2014 Ford Taurus, contains patrols. The T-3s max speed roads in the winter. the usability of normal mo- torcycle’s ability. external and interior camer- of 19 mph and poor off-road Similar technology was torcycles. “There is basically no as which record traffc stops performance makes it unsuit- phie Wilson, expressed de- being used by Old Town Fuel “I can’t say enough good maintenance needed, ex- and backseat passengers; able for most police work, sire to have students from the and Fiber, before its closing things about it,” Detective cept for the belt that has to the offcers themselves also however. University of Maine assist in in August, by turning wood Keith Mercier said. “It is bad be checked every so often,” wear cameras that are con- While not quite ready for researching Fiberight’s pro- into cellulosic sugars. The timing budget-wise, so un- Everett, a three-year UMPD stantly recording. There is use yet, the department also cedures. cellulosic sugars can be used fortunately we can’t keep it, veteran, said. “The motor- also a wireless system within operates a SUV that, while “We are looking forward for many chemical-based but it is really an impressive cycle is completely silent; it the vehicles, which allows technologically similar to the to the fndings from the products and plastics. machine, and we’ve enjoyed can go off road; and it has offcers to use laptops to run police cruisers, offers more study that MRC just execut- However, not all of the having it here the last two all the amenities, such as a license plate numbers, driver trunk space to carry medical ed a contract with UMaine municipal solid waste would weeks.” cell phone holder and radio. license or submit reports. supplies, crime scene materi- to complete. At this point we be used for the creation of The motorcycle, provid- It even charges the battery “On a typical Friday night, als and frearms. are in the beginning stages fuel products. Recyclables ed by Zero Motorcycles, an when you brake. The battery our busiest night, there are The police department is of confrming the technol- such as plastic, paper, glass electric motorcycle manufac- is warrantied for fve years.” usually up to eight offcers located on Rangeley Road ogy, but are excited at the and metal could be removed turer based in Scotts Valley, The motorcycle features deployed at once on campus, near the University’s en- prospect of what appears to and sold. Calif., weighs 428 pounds, a two operation modes: Sport, where we usually respond to trance, and can be contacted be a sustainable, affordable, “Milk jugs are selling at sizeable difference from the which provides max top alcohol and drug complaints at 207-581-4040, or 911 in and environmentally friendly $1,000 per ton. Plastic bags, police department’s normal speed and torque but reduc- as well as lockouts and sex- an emergency. method to manage municipal virgin polyethylenes, is sell- solid waste,” Wilson said. ing for $660 a ton — why Greg Lounder, the execu- would I burn that?” Stu- tive director of MRC, stated art-Paul explained. that professor Hemant Pendse If the study of the Mary- of the University’s Forest Bi- land-based company proves oproducts Research Institute advantageous to the MRC has been tasked with leading it could be a welcomed sigh the study of Fiberight. of relief for the area. The “Pendse has assembled a likely termination of the project team with expertise in PERC-Emera Maine contract industrial development and in 2018 could potentially process, techno-economic lead to municipal waste dis- analysis, enzymatic hydroly- posal complications as PERC sis and microbial fermenta- may raise their rates for pro- tion,” Lounder remarked. cessing waste from the MRC The study has been communities. planned to start this week, It has also been discussed and the MRC has request- about possibly using portions ed that the fnal report be of the Old Town Fuel and available before their annual Fiber plant for the fuel pro- meeting in January. cessing portion of the MRC’s Several goals of the study plan. will be to determine if the Sophie Wilson added that Trashanol process will be the potential new waste pro- able to operate effectively cessing operation could lead in the colder Maine climate, to several new jobs in the whether it will comply with area which has felt the pain the Department of Environ- of two large mills closing this mental Protection’s regula- year. tions and the minimal ton- She explained, “Initial nage required to make the review indicates that, if con- potential plant in Maine prof- structed, this project would itable. Board members of the generate a number of jobs — MRC have also inquired as to both semi and highly skilled whether the company could positions.” A4 • News The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014

USM impacting the GSBSE. from A1 “Currently, the GSBSE has 37 Ph.D. students and New bipartisan political student three professional science lie in French-speaking Can- masters students; over 150 ada,” Smith said. faculty across the six insti- “We also have the Cana- tutions are members of the group aims for change dian studies program, which GSBSE. The GSBSE is the is very important for the largest Ph.D. program in the Lauren Abbate based purely on statistics, the political process. political change. College of Liberal Arts and STEM disciplines in Maine. Staff Writer then these critics might be “If we look at only the Dumas, aware of the need Sciences for graduate and If the program were cut, right. traditional methods of par- to increase voter turnout undergraduate work. French the state would lose one of A new student organi- “[Critics] say that this ticipation, that people use we among Millennials, has made is an important part of those its premier graduate educa- zation focused on mobiliz- generation is disengaged. might miss really important voter registration the primary programs because Canada is tion programs; indeed, the ing members of all political They’re apathetic; they don’t ways that Millennials are effort of UMaine Common a bilingual country,” Smith GSBSE was recently rec- parties to bring awareness care; they’re uninformed,” participating,” Glover said. Sense Action. Though instead said. ognized as one of UMaine’s and education to the polit- said Rob Glover, a professor While previous gener- of utilizing traditional voter UMaine is a national re- Emerging Areas of Excel- ical issues affecting young of political science at UMa- ations have abided by the registration tables, the group source center that has been lence,” Neivandt said. Americans has been granted ine. traditional routes of civic is staying true to Millennial operating under a Depart- The biomedical science preliminary recognition by However, Common Sense participation such as voting form by registering people ment of Education Title and engineering feld is pre- UMaine Student Govern- Action believes that the Mil- and contacting local repre- to vote via TurboVote, an VI grant for over 30 years, dicted to rapidly grow over ment. lennial Generation is not en- sentatives, the Millennial online process which makes Smith said. the next decade, due to ris- “The polarized clubs gaging because the political Generation is more geared registering to vote as easy as Another aspect that ing health care demands and are more of the same,” said discourse in the U.S. is be- to engage politically through signing up for Facebook, ac- makes French important associated costs of an aging James Dumas, a third-year ing focused around political collaboration. cording to Dumas. is the tourism tie between population. Maine’s citizens political science student and topics that don’t rank high Political clubs on campus Common Sense Action is Canada and Maine because have the highest median president of UMaine Com- among young voters. “There have generally been operated not the frst bipartisan group Canada is Maine’s number age of any state in the U.S., mon Sense Action. “We want is no dialogue being directed based on party lines, leaving to be organized at UMaine. one trade partner, according so the need for a trained to promote political aware- towards students about what minimal room for collecting Until last year the group No to Smith. workforce in biomedical ness and advocacy to all Labels sought to bring stu- “Many people come from science and engineering is [UMaine] students, regard- dents together around issues Quebec and French speaking particularly important here, less of the political party they “We’re encouraging people to keep and leave their political par- New Brunswick to go to the Neivandt said. ty’s agendas at the door. belong to.” political labels, but think about them in a coast or go shopping at the The GSBSE aligns with The group Common While No Labels is no lon- Bangor Mall,” Smith said. the state of Maine’s and the Sense Action is a national way that is constructive to solving issues, ger an organization on cam- “I think it’s extremely nation’s needs in terms of student organization that has specifcally issues that affect our pus, it shares the frustration important for just about ev- workforce development. If had a chapter operating at generation.” with political polarization ery college student to have the GSBSE was eliminated, UMaine since the beginning that Common Sense Action is access to another language it would cripple the state’s of the semester. The group James Dumas looking to circumvent. at some level, to have access ability to create this essen- has three focal topics making President of UMaine Common Sense Action “[No Labels] emerged out to another culture, to another tial body of trained people. up its platform: implement- of dissatisfaction with the way of seeing the world and According to Neivandt, ing generational fairness party system and it viewed how another culture organiz- one of UMaine’s missions in regards to fscal politics, political issues affect our different viewpoints. But the party system as something es reality. Maybe just to not is to serve the needs of the creating more opportunities generation,” Dumas said. because of the politically di- that led people to very devise walk a mile in someone’s people of the state. Work- for America’s youth, and re- Common Sense Action verse promise that Common political positions,” Glover shoes, but even a kilometer force development, or train- pairing the polarized political wants to redirect the political Sense Action is proposing to said. would be good,” Smith said. ing students for careers sphere. conversation to discuss Mil- students, they believe their With the current election When you lose languages aligned with the needs of “We’re encouraging peo- lennial issues such as student discourse can be more con- season almost under wraps, you lose diversity of envi- the state, is a key aspect of ple to keep political labels, debt, education reform, in- structive than College Demo- Common Sense Action will ronments, Smith said, and this. The GSBSE exists to but think about them in a way frastructure investment, and crats or College Republicans. begin to focus its efforts on access to how that culture prepare and train the next that is constructive to solving Social Security reform. “It’s a different rendition generating advocacy for Mil- operates to the things it val- generation of professionals issues, specifcally those that Aside from redirecting the of engagement,” Glover said. lennial involvement as well ues, it’s ideas, and knowl- in Biomedical Science and affect our generation,” Du- political conversation Com- “[This type of engagement] is as organizing a formal de- edge can be lost as well. Engineering. mas said. mon Sense Action has the effective for certain types of bate between College Dem- Professor David “Many of the research In the 2012 Election, only opportunity to advance the things like solving a commu- ocrats and College Repub- Neivandt, Director of the topics undertaken by the 45 percent of the 46 millions new modes of civic engage- nity issue or getting a locality licans to be held later this University of Maine Grad- GSBSE students are direct- Americans ages 18 to 29 ment that are being shaped to address something quickly year. uate School of Biomedical ed toward issues that are years old turned out to vote. by the Millennial Generation. and doing it in a way that uses Common Sense Action Science and Engineering, prevalent within the state This age group, dubbed the These new forms of civic en- minimal resources.” meets in the Oakes Room gave perspective on what it of Maine,” Neivandt said. Millennial Generation, is gagement being exercised by However, Glover points on Wednesdays at 7:45 p.m., would be like if similar cuts “Specifcally, Maine has the demographic that many Millennials are a big reason out that abiding by some tra- though this will be subject were to happen to the gradu- one of the nation’s highest in the political realm deem critics may be incorrectly as- ditional modes of participa- to change once they become ate Biomedical Science pro- incidences per capita of can- disengaged and uninvolved. suming that the generation as tion, such as voting, is neces- fully recognized at the start gram at UMaine. cer; a very large proportion If this assumption is being a whole is uninvolved with sary to implementing actually of next semester. “The University of Maine of the work performed by Graduate School of Biomed- GSBSE students is related ical Science and Engineer- to cancer. Similarly, many ing [GSBSE] is a statewide GSBSE students research collaboration between the topics that address aging-re- University of Maine, the lated illnesses.” Jackson Laboratory, Mount According to Neivandt, Desert Island Biological Maine has a robust biomed- Laboratory, Maine Medical ical research community Center Research Institute, that includes University of the University of New En- Maine, University of New gland, and the University England and University of of Southern Maine. The Southern Maine and also GSBSE offers a Ph.D. in three private research in- biomedical science, a Ph.D. stitutions: Jackson Labora- in biomedical engineering, tory, Mount Desert Island and a Professional Science Biological Laboratory and Master’s in bioinformatics,” Maine Medical Center Re- Neivandt said. search Institute. Neivandt said all fve fac- The GSBSE uses these ulty of the USM’s Applied resources by uniting these Medical Sciences program six institutions, creating have been members of, and unique research and training are active in, the GSBSE. opportunities in Maine. Stu- One GSBSE Ph.D. student is dents in the program may being advised by one of the choose to perform their dis- USM faculty, and a second sertation research under the student is currently rotating direction of over 150 faculty at USM. The elimination of members, which provides the USM applied medical numerous opportunities, sciences program is directly Neivandt said. Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine Campus News • A5 Weekly Updates Briefs Police Quick news from around the University of Maine System Also Beat Cameron Paquette included The best from UMaine’s fnest News Editor in the plan is the UMPD proposal to move the Lauren Abbate UMS board of trustees UMS offces from When offcers ar- Staff Writer pass plan for central ad- their current location sity of Maine System says rived to the scene, they ministration powers in Bangor onto one of the its fall 2014 headcount is found Irvine, who ad- Oct. 24 A panel of University campuses. down 2.5 percent system- mitted to drinking an of Maine System (UMS) The board of trustees will wide, although the num- entire bottle of Svedka port of a strong odor of mar- 21:55 Wailin’ Winin’ trustees have approved a vote on whether to authorize bers are up slightly at the in less than two hours and was ijuana coming from a room Whelan plan that would give cen- the development of the plan system’s fagship campus trying to get back to his dorm. on the third foor of Aroos- tral administration more at their meeting on Nov. 16 in Orono and at UMaine The offcers deduced that Ir- took Hall. Upon arrival off- University of Maine Po- control of the individual and 17, she said. They will Fort Kent. vine was extremely disorient- cers knocked on the door and lice Department (UMPD) budgets of the seven cam- vote whether to approve the The enrollment fgures ed as his residency, Cumber- made contact with room res- responded to a Resident As- puses. plan at a later date. come out as the seven cam- ident Evan Davis, 18, who sistant complaint of a party land Hall, was on the opposite The plan, which is cur- puses are developing their side of campus. was compliant with offcers on the third foor of Knox rently being created by UMaine student arrest- budgets for the next year. and handed over a used pre- Hall. When offcers arrived Vice Chancellor for Ad- ed after armed break-in The deepest budget cuts 23:29 – Fraternal Fight scription bottle containing they made contact with room ministration and Finance Early Sunday morning, a so far this year have come Club marijuana and Zig-Zag roll- residents Andrew Whelan, Rebecca Wyke, is intended University of Maine student at USM, where President ing papers. Davis received a 18, and Michael Dunphy, 18. to give the board of trust- was caught trying to break David Flanagan is cutting UMPD and University summons for possession of a Whelan was not cooperative ees more insight into the into a house on Bennoch 50 faculty positions to Volunteer Ambulance Corps usable amount of marijuana. and became argumentative fnances of each campus Road in Old Town. The close $6 million of a total reported to the scene of an al- with the offcers; his room- and more infuence on how homeowner was present and $16 million budget gap for leged fght amongst two large Oct. 29 mate was trying to calm him funds are used. called the Old Town Police. the next fscal year. groups of people between down and handed over an In September, Wyke The student, 21-year- At Orono, offcials have Stodder Hall and College Av- 9:51 You want some ice assortment of beer, including presented the board with a old Luke Cole of Fletchers said they must cut next enue, however the fght sub- for that burn? a 12-pack of Natural Light. range of options they could Landing Township, was ar- year’s $242 million budget sided before emergency units Both were summonsed for pursue to change the fnan- rested shortly after 4 a.m. in by $7 million, but will not arrived. Offcers gathered that A female student resid- illegal possession of alcohol cial structure of the system. his dorm room after police eliminate any academic the fght occurred between a ing in Knox Hall issued an by a minor and were referred On Friday, the board chose identifed his car speeding programs and will try to group of visitors from Hus- assault complaint to UMPD to judicial affairs. to pursue the most aggres- away from the scene. avoid layoffs. son and several Sigma Alpha against her ex-boyfriend, sive of those options. Cole’s dorm was evac- Without changes, the Epsilon brothers. Both groups a non-student, Wednesday 22:23 The next day must If the plan comes to uated as offcers attempted entire University of Maine had been drinking at a fra- morning after he snuck into have sucked fruition, fnancial offcers to enter his room. Offcers System faces a project- ternity, though neither group her residence hall. After a on campuses who once re- made the arrest and students ed $69 million defcit by wished to press charges. verbal altercation with the Ryan Irvine, 18, was is- ported to their presidents were allowed back into the 2019. In the most recent complainant, the ex-boy- sued a summons for illegal would now be reporting to building an hour later. budget, approved in May, friend poured a cup of iced possession of alcohol by a Oct. 26 a chief operating offcer at offcials cut 157 positions coffee over her head. He minor after UMPD received the system level. The chief Enrollment down and used $11.4 million in 21:43 [Obligatory refer- was subsequently arrested a complaint that an intoxi- operating offcer and the across UMS this fall emergency funds to close ence to Afroman song] and charged with domestic cated male was kicking the trustees would become in- In the wake of a slew of a $36 million defcit in assault. front door to the Bryand volved much earlier in the budget cuts due to decreas- the system’s $529 million UMPD received a RA re- Global Science Building. budget-making process. ing enrollment, the Univer- budget. This week in Student Government Weekly recap of decisions made by the UMaine Student Government General Student Senate

Cameron Paquette about their time in office if he would be open to UMSG Inc.’s presence on “We should be mind- event. Vice President of News Editor as well as what they hope new projects. and off campus as well as ful about giving so much Student Entertainment to see and do going for- “I will throw money at to strengthen their part- money away for off-cam- Patrick Fortier-Brown, Umaine Student Gov- ward pending re-election. anything I think is a good nership with the town of pus events. When groups who was not in atten- ernment VP and Presi- Conant spoke first and idea,” Conant said. “We Orono. come in, we need to think dance at the time of the dent reflect on their time outlined three main issues want to be able to say ‘is it really beneficial,’” motion, made a case by in office and what they that he wants to work on. yes.” Budget report Le said. “I’m not say- proxy that, because of hope to see in the future The first of these is a turf Vice President Stewart VPFA Hoang Anh Le ing we shouldn’t fund the decision made by before a heated debate field to be built in Len- was next to speak. made an announcement off-campus events ever, UMSG Inc. at the be- on the funding of Delta gyl Hall, a project that “I’ve really enjoyed regarding revised finan- we should be mindful of ginning of the semester Tau Delta’s Honorarium Conant and his friend the position this past cial sponsorship guide- where our money goes.” to take funds away from took place at last week’s Dodge Tucker are work- year, I’ve seen a lot of lines, which she says she There is currently Student Entertainment meeting of UMSG Inc.’s ing on. people develop,” Stewart will bring to senate with- $80,805 left in the unal- and put them in the unal- General Student Senate. According to Conant said. “I want our leader- in the next few meetings. located fund for the rest located fund, GSS should the field is currently un- ship capabilities on this Regarding Senate of the semester. vote to allocate the funds Sailing team receives dergoing a feasibility campus to grow.” spending on off campus so as to alleviate the fi- final recognition study, with early esti- Stewart also spoke events, Le expressed Delta Tau Delta Hon- nancial strain on Student The sailing team, a mates putting its cost at about his wish to concern about the orarium denied funding Entertainment. group of student sailboat around $3 million. continue to amount being from unallocated Sens. Harvey and Be- enthusiasts who compete “It would make a nice develop spent. After a two-hour de- auregard among several against other schools gift for the universi- bate in which the origi- others were not happy in New England, were ty’s 150th anniversary,” nal motion was amend- that the contract for the granted final recognition. Conant said. ed several times, Delta headlining comedian had Group President Pat- The second part of Tau Delta’s request for been signed before the rick Robinson was on Conant’s plan is up to $1,600 to help fund their motion, putting GSS in hand to speak for the $75 in laundry funds for Honorarium featuring the position of having group, who wish to con- students living on campus a Last Comic Standing to make the decision on tinue competing and their first year. show was ultimately de- funding. There was also teaching new students Part three of his plan nied. Student Entertain- frustration due to what how to race. is to continue putting on ment will now cover the the senators felt was a events that impact be- remaining difference for lack of effort on the part President and VP give tween 80-100 students on the $4,920 event. of Delta Tau Delta in put- speeches campus to better publi- The main motion for ting forward any of their Ahead of last Thurs- cize UMSG Inc. $1,600 was originally own money. day’s UMSG Presiden- After his speech, going to be supplement- “We’ve been put in tial and Vice Presidential Conant took several ques- ed with $1,300 from the middle by Student Elections, President Jus- tions from the crowd and Student Entertainment, Entertainment and that tin Conant and Vice Pres- Senators. One member of who are assisting the fra- shouldn’t impact Delta ident Trey Stewart spoke the crowd asked Conant ternity in putting on the Tau Delta,” Harvey said.

Diversions Answer Key

Puzzles, comics and more on A8

Crossword Sudoku Word Search A6

Opinion Monday, November 3, 2014 EDITORIAL Delicate balance between individual and state in ebola quarantine fght The Fourth Amendment deemed to be in violation Americans know little protocols for treatment. make decisions that pro- ual whom cannot subvert of the Constitution codi- of her civil liberties. A about ebola because it has, Even the suggestion that tect the public without in- the entire societal order fies the rights of the citi- Maine District Court judge until very recently, oc- industry experts, given a fringing on people’s rights. merely because it believes zens to be secure in their recently ruled that the state curred only in other parts high level of trust by the Though it’s important, itself superior. When this persons, properties and could not restrict Hickox’s of the world. public due to an economy especially in crisis, for becomes acceptable, soci- effects. It’s a pretty basic movements, citing a lack Ignorance breeds un- based in specialization, ar- individual right to not be etal order breaks down and concept, crucial to a coun- of evidence that doing so sacrificed for public good, the good of other individu- try whose rule of law and presented a danger to the it’s equally important that als is threatened. order rests in the equitable public. the rule of law is respect- Yes, Kaci Hickox has respect for civil liberties. The court’s decision re- Ignorance breeds uncertainty, which, if ed. Regardless of whether the same right to civil lib- So, how rectify this po- affirms that the abrogation unchecked, leads to fear and irrationality. the New Jersey quarantine erties as her fellow Maine sition with the threat posed of civil liberties must meet Not only does the public know little about order was good protocol or residents, but not to the to society by individuals a high bar. The burden is the disease, but because it does not natu- not, it was an official act point where she prospers with contagious diseases? on proving the validity by a sovereign state, as to their detriment. Civil When Kaci Hickox, a of the claim, in this con- rally occur here, American health offcials was Maine’s order, which government exists for a nurse who worked with eb- text this means an active are unfamiliar with protocols for treatment. Hickox defied by going for reason. It sometimes acts ola patients and West Af- threat to the wellbeing of a bike ride. on bad information, but rica, returned to her home the public must be proved. Since state governments this is easily rectified by in Fort Kent on Friday, This is in agreement with are limited in power and an admission of error and this became an issue with the “Innocent until proven certainty, which, if un- en’t in control is enough to can only act on the best in- a change in protocols. The which Maine must grapple. guilty” line of reasoning at checked, leads to fear and cause panic. formation given to them by refusal by an individual to Despite being test- the heart of American law. irrationality. Not only does That’s why it’s suprema- health professionals, they recognize their own fal- ed and found negative, However, people are the public know little about cy in matters touching with can only assume they’re lacy, however, is not so Hickox was kept in quar- still uncertain, and un- the disease, but because it disease protocols needs to being given relevant, true easily changed and poses antine in New Jersey fol- derstandably so. Besides does not naturally occur remain with qualified in- data and act accordingly. as much a threat to public lowing her arrival at New- the mortality rate and ter- here, American health of- dustry professionals. They Individual rights need to be safety as government in- ark Airport, an action she rifying symptoms, many ficials are unfamiliar with are in the best position to respected, yes, but individ- eptitude. Newest Dr. Who lead actor features masculine qualities, a surprise in modern media

ity deserves to be recog- the show’s context. These regarding the blunted tool the most difficult deci- murder innocent bystand- nized and promoted for three particular qualities of emotionalism for the sions. And to make these ers before Capaldi’s “Doc- everyone to see. Such an blend into a proper display sharper edge of rational- decisions effectively, he tor” agrees to destroy it. example can be found in of masculine intellect and ism. In the episode titled commands the stage. This These three qualities what is possibly the most strength, something rarely “Mummy on the Orient character knows the right — a rational mind, benev- niche program of all time, displayed in modern me- Express,” Capaldi’s “Doc- decisions to make because olent dominance and indi- “Doctor Who.” dia. tor” commanded victims of his rational logic and viduality — are core tenets Actor Peter Capaldi re- From the character’s of the episode’s monster to intelligence. For his own of masculinity. A man will Matthew Pinkham cently took the mantle of first appearance in the forgo fear or useless emo- safety, and out of genuine find success within him- Graduate First Year the show’s lead role, and season’s incarnation, Ca- tional responses and ana- desire to save everyone self if he internally con- Psychology has stunned viewers with paldi’s acting infused his lyze the threat facing them else, he issues commands ceptualizes these three his acting abilities. Ca- character with a noticeable in an attempt to prevent and organizes action. ideas. Science-fiction televi- paldi brings a previously rationality. A very simple future deaths. This leads to the last It is certainly surprising sion programs are usually lacking sense of sartorial example of this is seen in Using his rational mind virtue, individuality. This to find this conceptualiza- relegated to the status of elegance to his portrayal the episode “Listen,” in and dominant personal- is a summation of the pre- tion of an idealized man nerdy, unvalued and dises- of the show’s titular char- which the character con- ity, Capaldi’s “Doctor” vious two qualities of ra- in modern media, which is teem. This is not without acter. structs a logic based argu- devised a plan to save tionality and dominance. usually preoccupied with good reason — many of However, his portrayal ment, actively voicing de- the maximum amount of By being intellectually and denigrating masculinity these programs are “cult” is an example of quality ductions and observation people possible without verbally strong, Capaldi’s as an archaic and barbaric hits, meaning they have and worthy of investiture in the episode’s opening dwelling on those who character is strong in his belief. It is more surpris- low production quality and for another reason. The segment. were lost. As he said in own presence. The charac- ing to find this example in poor acting with their only character Capaldi plays, A more poignant exam- another episode, “Time ter himself is not brought an English science-fiction support from dedicated, this “Doctor” exhibits ple the character’s grap- Heist,” “She’s dead; we’re into the service of others show. Peter Capaldi cre- if not outright obsessive, qualities of true mascu- pling with conflict and not. Keep your mind fo- without force and does not ates a character who em- fans. Unfortunately, this linity. In Capaldi’s acting, anger. In a science-fiction cused so it stays that way.” acquiesce to the whims of bodies core concepts of an climate makes discussing it is easy to see the dis- program, these two ele- This is the second fea- a collective. This is seen ideal, healthy man. These these programs a laborious tinct qualities of rationale, ments are a staple of every ture of healthy masculinity in the aforementioned ep- ideals are worthy of inves- task. dominance and individual- episode. Capaldi’s “Doc- that viewers see, benevo- isode “Mummy on the Ori- titure along with the acting Exceptions will always ist behavior and how they tor” is calculating when lent dominance. Capaldi’s ent Express” in which the that presents them to the be made for quality. Qual- are brought to light within a threat is displayed, dis- “Doctor” is forced to make villain has to threaten and audience.

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The Maine Campus is an independent student publication. It is completely produced by undergraduate students of the University of Maine. Student subscriptions are provided for free through the communications fee. Write us. The Maine Campus is printed at the Alliance Press in Brunswick, Maine. Our offces are located at 131 Memorial Union. Contact us by e-mail at [email protected] or by phone at 207.581.1273. Letters to the editor should be 300 words, concise and All content herein © 1875 - 2014 The Maine Campus, unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved. clearly written. If applicable, include your academic year. Editorial and Production Send all submissions to Katherine Revello at Editor in Chief Derrick Rossignol Culture Editor Danielle Walczak [email protected], or on FirstClass. [email protected] [email protected] News Editor Cameron Paquette Photo Editor Aley Lewis Submissions may be edited for length, clarity and style. [email protected] [email protected] Sports Editor Anthony Panciocco Web Developer Zach Connerty-Marin Anonymous letters will not be published. [email protected] [email protected] Opinion Editor Katherine Revello Production Manager Bethany Warnock [email protected] Head Copy Editor Laura Simonds Opinion pieces should be roughly 650 words and Business and Advertising clearly written. Include your name, year and major. Business Manager Zebediah Letourneau [email protected] - 581.1223 Submissions should be in .doc format. Advertising Manager Joshua Bellinger [email protected] - 581.1215 Send all opinion pieces to Katherine Revello. For rate sheets and other advertising information, visit advertise.mainecampus.com.

The attitudes and views expressed in the Opinion section are those of their authors only and do not necessarily represent the views of The Maine Campus or its staff. Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine Campus Opinion • A7 Harassment of individuals My critical of sexism in video enlightening games needs to end yet frightening

do at Utah State Universi- licia Day, who has appeared receiving threats, hateful ty due to terroristic threats in many shows appreciated messages and was doxxed, summer made against her appear- by gamers, such as “Su- a process where hackers ance. According to an uni- pernatural,” “The Guild” steal and publicly release versity press release, USU and “Dragon Age.” To be personal information. This internship received an email which honest, it was only a matter treatment is similar to that contained threats against of time until I wrote some- endured by Sarkeesian and Sarkeesian and those who thing about the treatment many others who have ex- the dinner table, reported Cameron Grover attend her presentation. As of Sarkeesian, but as far pressed similar feelings on on the airwaves and read Third year we all must know by this as I’m concerned, nobody this issue. about in the newspapers English time, school shootings are messes with Felicia Day, I feel sorry for and want to was very much a reality. not unheard of in the United who wrote a post on Tumblr take steps for these women My sample size was 80 cli- Over the past few weeks States; but it irks me that vi- about how she felt singled and men who speak against ents and does not allow me I have noticed an uptick in olent threats arose from one out and awkward within her the actions of GamerGate, to draw a scientific conclu- the frequency of news sto- woman’s criticism of an in- gamer-centric community but not because they are be- sion, but I found that the ries about women being credibly fawed industry. simply because of her gen- ing dragged through prover- Stuart Higgins younger these clients were, publicly persecuted or even Anyone with eyes can der: “Seeing another gamer bial streets just for voicing Fourth year the lower the probability threatened over the Inter- see that the women in vid- on the street used to be an their opinions and for doing Business Management of meeting their retirement net, as well as out in the eo games are not made or auto-smile opportunity, or their jobs. goals. When reverting back real world. I continue to be treated the same way as an entry into a conversation Women are being objec- In the summer of 2013, to the personal profiles, I astounded by the intensity their male counterparts. starting with, ‘Hey, dude! I tifed through many forms I was offered an internship found the typical 45-year- of the harassment and abuse This is evident even in the love that game too!’ But for of media and nobody seems in the private wealth di- old couple often faces the that this world is willing to way early “Tomb Raid- the frst time maybe in my to have any plans to try vision of a large financial same financial issues, is- allow women to endure. er” games were made and life, on that Saturday after- and put an end to it, except services firm. During my sues much more daunting GamerGate, a “move- marketed. No grave robber noon, I walked towards that those being dragged be- three-month tenure, one than those the previous ment” of gamers who have in her right mind would at- pair of gamers, and I didn’t hind and publicly “shamed” of my primary responsi- generation had to tackle. been persistently threat- tempt the feats that protago- smile. I didn’t say hello. In by gamers and others with bilities included provid- Let me share the case of ening Anita Sarkeesian, a nist Lara Croft accomplish- fact, I crossed the street so similar mindsets. I’m not ing technical support for a specific couple to whom famous feminist critic of es in shorts that short. I wouldn’t walk by them. A saying that all gamers are several financial advisors. I will henceforth refer to as sexism and other issues Furthermore, Sarkee- small voice of doubt in my complicit in sexism, or This technical support con- Mr. and Mrs. Putz. Both are within the gaming com- sian’s analysis of these brain now suspected that even take place in Gamer- sisted of creating statistical 47 years old with a com- munity, is one such recent video games is not terribly those guys and I might not Gate shaming and harass- data for existing client’s bined income in the low story. Through the Internet revolutionary. In my opin- be comrades after all. That ment. I only mean to con- portfolio performance and six figures; they also have and some other channels, ion, GamerGate has found a they might not greet me demn those who do harmful retirement projections for three children ages 11, 14 Sarkeesian has been driven punching bag in Sarkeesian with refected friendliness, things to other people, or prospective clients. My and 17. Mrs. Putz recently from ­­her home, been made and will continue to move but contempt.” practice doxxing. experiences were valuable, received a $250,000 inher- to endure rape and death from one outspoken female Shortly after the actress Everyone should be able but it also showed me how itance from her deceased threats and recently had to to the next, an great example posted her feelings about to feel safe in life, both cy- hard middle-class families parents. This sounds like cancel a talk she was set to being the persecution of Fe- the movement, she began ber and past the screen. in America have to strug- a promising case, but the gle to make ends meet. Putz’ face $225,000 in col- The personal profile of lege expenses over the next existing clients were typi- 10 years and have zero dol- A Guide to the November cally those of empty nest- lars saved. Meanwhile, Mr. ers over the age of 55, and Putz wants to retire by age with more than $2 million 67, has no pension, only in financial assets. These $38,000 in a retirement 4th Election people were the firm’s account and is currently platinum clients, also saving only $2,000 a year. All U.S. citizens age 18 the following questions: strengthen the rural economy? a drug discovery and develop- known as the nation’s one Prior to receiving the inher- and older are eligible to vote ment facility that will improve percent. On the other hand, itance, the family accumu- in the Nov. 4 election. Most Question 1: Citizen Ini- Question 4: Bond Issue human health and stimulate prospective clients were lated $16,000 in credit card polling places are open until tiative Do you favor a biotechnology job growth and households seeking to ini- debt. Worse yet, Mr. Putz’s 8 p.m. Do you want to ban the $10,000,000 bond issue, to be economic activity? tiate a relationship with a father is in a $45,000-per- Maine has a same-day vot- use of bait, dogs or traps in awarded through a competi- financial advisor and hop- year assisted living facili- er registration law, meaning bear hunting except to protect tive process and to be matched Question 6: Bond Issue ing to carve out a financial ty and has only $70,000 in voters can register at the polls. property, public safety, or for by $11,000,000 in private and Do you favor a $10,000,000 plan that would provide a the bank. Mr. Putz knows University students should research? other funds, to build a research bond issue to ensure clean secure retirement at a rea- he will have to chip in with vote in the town in which they center and to discover genetic water and safe communi- sonable age. Their personal other siblings when his fa- reside. This means students Question 2: Bond Issue solutions for cancer and the ties across Maine; to protect profiles usually included a ther’s funds run dry. Do the who attend classes in Orono Do you favor an $8,000,000 diseases of aging, to promote drinking water sources; to re- husband and wife who both math and the cash outflow but live in Bangor should vote bond issue to support Maine job growth and private sector store wetlands; to create jobs worked and were between far exceeds the inflow. in Bangor. agriculture, facilitate eco- investment in this State, to and vital public infrastructure; the ages of 40 and 55. The family financial If your place of residence nomic growth in natural re- attract and retain young pro- and to strengthen the State’s These families also had 2-3 plan is moving in reverse. has changed since the last sources-based industries and fessionals and make the State long-term economic base and kids who have yet to attend They are not alone. Mil- election, you will need to up- monitor human health threats a global leader in genomic competitive advantage? college. lions of families face sim- date your registration. Bring a related to ticks, mosquitoes medicine? We may identify these ilar problems throughout photo ID (MaineCards count) and bedbugs through the cre- Question 7: Bond Issue two client segments in the our country, but ironically and a piece of mail, like a bill ation of an animal and plant Question 5: Bond Issue Do you favor a $7,000,000 way social scientists la- the government believes or disease and insect control lab- Do you favor a $3,000,000 bond issue to facilitate the bel them as Baby Boom- the Putz family and people letter, which proves your oratory administered by the bond issue, to be awarded growth of marine businesses ers and Generation Xers. I like them should be placed residency. Remember, the vot- University of Maine Coopera- through a competitive pro- and commercial enterprises found helping the advisors in the wealthy column. er registration form is a legal tive Extension Service? cess and to be matched by that create jobs and improve with these two distinctly Higher taxes, stalled document, so make sure to ac- $5,700,000 in private and pub- the sustainability of the State’s different groupings both wages, negative savings curately fll it out. Voter fraud Question 3: Bond Issue lic funds, to modernize and marine economy and related challenging and rewarding. rates, the continuous rise is a federal crime, so abide by Do you favor a bond issue expand infrastructure in a bio- industries through capital in- However, the more per- in college tuitions and un- polling place protocols. to provide $4,000,000 in funds logical laboratory specializing vestments, to be matched by sonalized financial plans I certainty with health pre- Orono’s off-campus poll- to insure portions of loans to in tissue repair and regenera- at least $7,000,000 in private completed, the more I be- miums and deductibles are ing place for this election small businesses to spur in- tion located in the State in or- and other funds? came increasingly aware some of the factors that cycle is the Orono Middle vestment and innovation and der to increase biotechnology of a well-publicized mac- chip away at the wallets School gym, which is behind to provide $8,000,000 in funds workforce training, retain and ro-level societal problem. of Americans. This is very the Public Safety building on to make fexible loans to small recruit to the State multiple For more information, visit The deterioration of frightening because these Main Street. businesses to create jobs, biomedical research and de- www.maine.gov and click on the American dream that I situations will only be- This year’s ballot contains revitalize downtowns and velopment groups and create “voting” at the top of the page. have heard be discussed at come increasingly worse.

Samuel Keefe UP THUMBS DOWN Snow Tummy shovels rumbles

Kielbasa The death of Mufasa

Snowball Cold winter fghts nights

Plethora Ebola A8 • Diversions The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014 Diversions Across 44. Person in a pool 2. Cole’s follower gerald Crossword 1. Responds in “Jeopar- 45. Miniature racer 3. New Zealand fruit 33. Hollywood deal dy!” 46. Start to freeze? 4. Annual visitor maker 5. Automaker Ransom 47. Annoying inconve- 5. Punctually 34. “The Inferno” 9. Cut close nience 6. Clark’s colleague author 14. Pelvic bones 49. Like Easter eggs 7. Title for Agatha 35. --- motion (begin) 15. He put two and two 51. Pin number? Christie 37. Authors together 52. Brylcreem unit? 8. Kind of life 39. Full of ginger 16. Heaped 54. Wade’s legal op- 9. Like the colors of the 42. Wedding day jitters 17. When the rooster ponent rainbow 43. All the time in the crows 56. OFF! 10. To the --- (fully) world 18. You can tell it 65. Popular toy since 11. Jai --- 48. Jug handle 19. Send to seventh 1964 12. Presidential option 50. Anonymous John heaven 66. Autobahn auto 13. Genesis setting 53. Vain claim 20. OFF! 67. Bunch of baloney 21. Apr. workhorse 55. Chemical com- 23. Chest thumper 68. “Haste makes 22. Go on a fast break? pound 24. Like 4-Down waste,” e.g. 25. Perfect basketball 56. Petri dish stuff 25. Masseur’s milieu 69. Perturbed state shot 57. Like EEE shoes 28. Takes into a count 70. Beat by a nose 26. One of a 1492 trio 58. In --- (in hot water) 31. Stair parts 71. Send payment 27. They may carry 59. Pic-a-nic basket 36. Small bundle of 72. Like Ho’s bubbles burdens seeker straw 73. Cabooses’ spot 29. Like some turkey 60. “Scarface” star Paul 38. Granola ingredients meat 61. Valhalla god 40. Pond scum and 30. Bed or home 62. Shade of green kelp Down addition 63. Olympian Korbut 41. OFF! 1. Lends a hand 32. Melodious Fitz- 64. Keg contents onlinecrosswords.net. Answer key located on A5

Word Search: Weather XKCD By Randall Munroe

BAROMETER LIGHTNING BLIZZARD MIST CELSIUS MONSOON CLOUDS OVERCAST COLD RAIN CYCLONE SHOWER DOWNPOUR SLEET DRIZZLE SNOW DROUGHT SQUALL FAHRENHEIT STORM FLOOD SUNNY FLURRIES TEMPERATURE FOG THERMOMETER FORECAST THUNDER FREEZE TORNADO FROST TSUNAMI HAIL TYPHOON HOT VISIBILITY HUMIDITY WINDY HURRICANE ICE puzzles.ca. Answer key located on A11

Sudoku xkcd.com

Each row, column and 3x3 square must have numbers 1 - 9 in any order, but each digit can only appear once. There is only one correct answer. Cyanide & Happiness By Dave McElfatrick Difficulty level: Easy

explosm.net

Nedroid By Anthony Clark

puzzles.ca. Answer key located on A11

Word Scramble: Weather An * indicates the answer is made of more than one word.

1. eetrwah ______9. omrts ______

2. iorleesmttgoo ______10. tgiignnlh ______

3. rnotaod ______11. anri ______

4. cniearrhu ______12. uerthdn ______

5. ari ______13. ari ssma nedroid.com

6. sspeerru ______

mass

storm 10. lightning 11. rain 12. thunder 13. air air 13. thunder 12. rain 11. lightning 10. storm Flip this page for

7. ldscou ______ricane 5. air 6. pressure 7. clouds 8. humidity 9. 9. humidity 8. clouds 7. pressure 6. air 5. ricane -

8. idytihum ______hur 4. tornado 3. meteorologist 2. weather 1. puzzle answers abc-teach.com Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine Campus Culture • A9 50 Cents: Doug Palmeter Making a

ency. “Life Education and De- perfect mixtape “We talk a lot about velopment” that he and his grace and truth and those wife run. The service he COLUMN Secondly, I knew the format kinds of relationships with provides is what he thinks and length: the mix would be acceptance and love. Spir- everyone needs. burned to a CD, so at most, itual stuff,” Palmeter said. “Almost everybody it could be 80 minutes long, Given Carter’s major the wishes they had a mentor, which usually works out to two often philosophize. wouldn’t it be nice to have about 18 songs. Lastly, I knew Besides being more hon- someone you could be hon- the mood or idea I needed to est, Carter fnds it interest- est with and you knew they capture: music that’s good for ing to see how he’s devel- were going to be honest playing in the car. oped throughout the three with you and that you could How I Hear It I began the process by years he’s known Palmeter. drop your guard and you Derrick Rossignol making an iTunes playlist, Carter and Palmeter Danielle Walczak, Culture Editor “Acceptance of situa- didn’t have to worry too going through my library tions I would say, I get hos- much? It’s really sweet,” and adding songs to it that I Danielle Walczak and Husson College for the tile about certain things I Palmeter said. As their native medium has thought would ft the desired Culture Editor last two decades. can’t change for instance,” Carter who is 25-years- lost its footing due to techno- mood and that the recipient “I fnd that most people Carter said. “Doug has old said the age difference logical advancement and cul- would enjoy. After my ini- Editor’s Note: 50 Cents want to grow and change, helped me to accept that, between he, and Palmeter tural change, the mixtape has tial content grab, I had a mi- is a weekly article where a there are areas of our life things I can’t change. He doesn’t get in the way. become more and more rarely nor problem: the playlist was M.C. staffer will sit with a where we want to grow gave the strength to handle “I sometimes wonder if seen. They used to be a form about 60 songs long and was sign reading “Interviews 50 and see change. And that’s those things.” I’ll get too old for this, or of artistic expression and dis- a non-unifed, eclectic mix. cents” and wait to see what what I do I’m kind of like Palmeter decided he’d lose the ability to relate and play of dedication: pre-Inter- That happened because I see happens, gleaning the sto- a life coach. I come along work with people, when to be relevant to college net, you had to either get ac- there being two different types ries of those who sit down, and help that person change God spoke to him as a wild- students in their life. So my cess to tapes and records of the of driving music: electron- in attempts to create a fuller and give them some tools, life biology student in Cal- wife and I think about that songs you wanted, then record ic-based, bass-heavy music picture of those at UMaine. in which to make that ifornia. and it hasn’t happened yet,” them onto a cassette. If you that’s better for nighttime or The idea is derived from a change,” Palmeter said. “[God] said ‘I want you Palmeter said. were determined, you might upbeat environments; and TV series, which aired on He said he believes to work with people, not The next step in Pal- have even waited for the right mellower indie rock, which is ABC and PBS in the 1990s many students make many animals,’” Palmeter said. meter’s journey is to com- song to play on the radio and best-suited for a casual, possi- and early 2000s called “In- changes in college but cer- “It was like, ‘What? You’re plete his book about grace time your presses of the record bly refective daytime cruise. terviews 50 Cents.” tain parts are left out. kidding me.’ It wasn’t ver- and truth. He hopes the and stop buttons perfectly. I ended up solving this by Doug Palmeter is at- “You’re here at school bal or anything, don’t think book can teach people to Getting a mixtape from making two playlists, one for tracted to whatever grows. you’re going to develop so- I’m crazy, but it was just be “appropriately trans- somebody meant that they the former mood and another And that’s why he became a cially, you’re going to de- as clear as if anybody had parent; practice saying, cared. It was an exhibition of for the latter. I tried to make mentor for college students velop physically, intellectu- spoken to me.” “yes” and “no,” because their musical taste, selected one mix that could fow be- to help them do the same. ally and relationally, who’s Palmeter immediately a lot of time we don’t and arranged in a way that tween moods well and ef- “I’ve been doing similar really helping you develop started changing his way of say no to people because would mean something to fectively captured both, but things for a long time, but I in character and spirit?” thinking. we’re afraid of rejection; the recipient. Mixtapes lived it would have taken a more like things that grow. I like Palmeter asks. “I said I got a lot to learn. and then I’d say prac- on during the CD era as well, skilled playlist-er than myself trees that grow; I like plants Palmeter meets with a I said to myself, ‘Man I tice accepting others and and while locating the desired to accomplish that, and 80 that grow; I like to see my- few students every week, have a lot need to learn and yourself, good and bad. songs made the process less minutes didn’t feel like ade- self grow; and I love to see one of those students is Ja- I have a lot I need to work You have good and bad in effort-intensive, the broad quate time to cover two differ- others grow. So I guess it’s son Carter, a ffth-year phi- on in my own life.’ There yourself and you see good reaches of the Internet also ent vibes. just a passion,” Palmeter losophy student. Although were areas I still need to de- and bad in others, but it’s helped broaden the pool of Having the right tracks is said. Palmeter talks with differ- velop but that was probably awful hard to accept that available songs, leading to the key, but almost as important Palmeter, a 60-year-old ent students about different one of the initial things.” isn’t it. We beat ourselves possibility of more eclectic is getting their order correct. Orono resident, has been topics most relate back to Palmeter has a few other up, learning to accept the compilations. Ordering your mixtape is sim- mentoring college students the ides of honesty, charac- volunteers who work with good and bad in others and Today, although not as im- ilar to a musician deciding at the University of Maine ter, integrity and transpar- him under the nonproft ourselves.” mediately obvious, mixtapes the tracklist for their . are still distributed, wheth- The songs should fow well er they be in the form of an and vary in pace so there are 8tracks.com station or a shared no dull lulls or adrenaline playlist on Spotify. It’s possi- over-saturation. ble, though, that the artistry of The name of the mixtape Climbing: an indoor adventure the practice has been lost, or at may be the most important least diluted. It’s still possible thing. It’s the recipient’s frst to apply the philosophies of impression of the mixtape. It COLUMN the factors of outdoor bouldering is limited to a hand to belay and instruct the original mixtape to today’s establishes the mood of the climbing can vary, indoor certain height, and there climbers. The center also creation of them. mixtape. It’s the personality of climbing allows for a more are crash pads at the base offers lead climbing clin- The frst step is to decide the mixtape. It’s how the mix- controlled experience. of the wall. Bouldering of- ics, as well as route set- what kind of mixtape to make, tape is identifed. The title sets Indoor climbing is gen- fers shorter routes, but this ting clinics, where students as there are several varieties. the table and must be carefully erally divided into three often makes them more can learn to set their own There is the general mixtape, considered. Maybe try a pun major categories: Boulder- physically taxing than oth- climbing routes. where the creator compiles on the prominent genre or the ing, top-rope climbing and er forms of climbing. The If fear of heights is favorite songs without much recipient’s name. Either way, lead climbing. style emphasizes on power, a concern, Hilary Bun- thought put into the grouping; it must be impactful. Adventure Time The most common style strength and dynamics. trock, a UMaine student there is the concept mixtape, Lastly, there’s the method Molly Joyce of climbing is top-rope Lead climbing is a tech- and member of the Maine where the creator tries to con- of delivery. In my case, a CD climbing, which is when nique that allows a climb- Bound staff, says that she vey a particular idea or mood was asked for, but if the mix- For those who don’t the climber ties in to a rope er to ascend a wall with- was afraid of heights until with the collection; and there tape was unrequested, do you want to travel far from that passes through an an- out a belayer. The climber she started climbing. is the personal mixtape, where go with the CD, or do you campus for an adventure, chor at the top of the wall, attaches themselves to a “You just adjust to the creator works to craft a share MP3s with them on a pen the Maine Bound indoor and run back down to the length of climbing rope, it,” Buntrock says, “you mix that will have signifcant drive, or do you share a Spoti- climbing center is locat- belayer. As the climber as- and ascends the wall reevaluate your fear of meaning for the recipient or fy playlist, or something else? ed at the center of UMa- cends the wall, the belayer while periodically climb- heights.” impart some sort of greater Like the mixtape itself, the ine. It offers a 32-foot pulls the slack on the rope, ing themselves in to fixed Buntrock encourag- message. proper delivery method differs high climbing tower, as a which keeps the climber carabiners connected to es those who have never To walk through the pro- from situation to situation. well as a 45-foot-long-by- from falling if they were the face of the wall. Un- climbed before to “give it cess, let’s use a mixtape I While the technology avail- 12-foot-high bouldering to let go. Top-rope climb- like, top-rope climbing, the a try, it’s exciting and not recently made for a friend able to create and distribute wall. There are routes for ing is ideal for first-time climber does not have a set as scary as it seems.” of mine as an example. She mixtapes has evolved, what climbers of all experience climbers, because it allows anchor, which could lead to Maine Bound is open said I should make her a good hasn’t changed is people caring levels, as well as knowl- the climber to go at their possibly larger falls. This Monday, Wednesday, driving CD, so with just that about others and music being edgeable staff on-hand to own pace, and is less de- style of climbing is best for Thursday and Friday 3 request, I already had three a great way of showing that. help belay, or answer any manding than other forms more experience climbers. p.m. - 10 p.m., and Sat- basic parameters set: the If your fngers are too stubby questions. of climbing. For those who have nev- urday and Sunday 4 p.m. songs should fall somewhere for the piano and you have the The sport of indoor rock Bouldering is a style of er climbed before, Maine - 8 p.m. The facilities are between the music I like and rhythm of a fsh fopping on climbing is intended to climbing that is done with- Bound offers introductory free for Umaine Students the music she likes, so she can land, mixtapes are a still-artis- mimic the experience of out any ropes. Because climbing classes, in ad- and Campus Recreation hear new stuff without being tic alternative to woo some- climbing outside. Because the climber is not tied in, dition to having staff on- members. caught too off guard by it. body through song. Film explores ‘God Particle’ through human eyes COLUMN “Particle Fever,” released shortly before the launching what they do, what drives theoretical physics, or all of popular science articles about this past March and currently of the LHC, the world’s larg- them, and what makes them the complex theories and con- physics on the web. If you streaming on Netfix, shares est particle accelerator ever tick. Following these people cepts introduced in this mov- have any interest in science the story of this discovery, of- built. Built in Switzerland at through the years leading up ie. The good thing, though, is and how the world works, fering insight into the science the European Organization for to the Higgs-Boson discovery, that the director understands pondering big questions, and behind it as well as the lives Nuclear Research (CERN), we listen to them discuss ev- that most of us aren’t physi- meeting the faces behind the of some of the physicists in- the LHC was created to gain erything from basic physics to cists. The science is there, but research, watch this movie. volved in this historical event. insight into the fundamental more complex theories of the it’s not overwhelming in the It successfully adds a human Directed by a physicist-turned laws of nature, by recreating universe that have yet to be slightest; in fact, the movie touch to a feld most of us Documentary Theater flmmaker, the flm offers a conditions just after the Big proven, all in a manner that manages to make the science can’t even begin to compre- Chase Brunton look at the years leading up Bang. It consists of a 17-mile is fascinating and not overly exciting. The flm crew set out hend. to the discovery. It follows six long ring of magnetic pipe, complex. We also see them to make a movie about people, David Kaplan, a theoreti- The discovery of the physicists as they do their part where protons—particles at laugh, argue, celebrate and and it works. The whole pro- cal physicist at CERN, said it Higgs-Boson particle — also in the search for the Higgs-Bo- the center of atoms—are raced philosophize about life, sci- duction is smooth, too, with well: known as the more sensational son, which is theorized to be at around the rings. These pro- ence and art. We see the span some majorly artistic editing “It’s certainly the biggest “God particle” — two years the center of everything in the tons build up speed, and once of six years leading up to the choices. With the help of some thing that’s happened in my ago was a big deal in the world universe. they become fast enough, they breakthrough. genius effects, explanations lifetime, the discovery of new of physics. The existence of a It’s an entertaining and are collided, and the results are Next to the science, these of complicated processes are fundamental particles. And the particle like the Higgs-Boson heartfelt flm that makes com- recorded by computers and people are what make “Parti- made entertaining and simple, Higgs-Boson is a particle like was predicted over 40 years plicated physics exciting. analyzed by physicists around cle Fever” so enjoyable. In the and complex theories become no other, like nothing we’ve ago, but in 2012, it was con- What’s that? A movie the world. one-on-one interviews, it’s as palatable. ever seen before. And it is frmed, thanks to a large num- about particle physics that’s Many of those physicists if the camera is never there. As for me, I’ve never tak- weird, and we do not under- ber of physicists and their big exciting? Hold your seats, be- work right at CERN, and in And then of course there’s en a physics class in my life, stand it.” expensive machine: the Large cause it’s true. “Particle Fever” we follow six the science. Now, I’m not go- but after watching this movie, And neither do I, but it sure Hadron Collider (LHC). The flm begins in 2007, of them closely, learning about ing to pretend that I understand I found myself reading up on is cool. A10 • Culture The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014 Director ly. The group is looking to go from A12 abroad again in 2016. The experiences and op- portunities that the Singers ing ways to teach the group has given Cates, he said, is and how to tailor to what one of his favorite aspects group you are teaching and about being a part of the how to increase their skills, group. from to elementary to college “I think few people can level. say before they graduate “You need to be comfort- college that they’ve sung all able being in front of a big over the world in some of the group of people. You don’t world’s most historic sights, have to have a gregarious, and that’s a pretty incredible type A personality to be a thing for a choir to offer,” good conductor, but it def- Cates said. nitely helps,” Vogt said. For Vogt, a key part of “The conductor is kind of conducting a choir is doing a because they’re the lots of rehearsal and using one in charge of the music, your body language to lead but they’re the only one in the the group, because everything room who isn’t making any the conductor does will come sound,” Vogt said. back in the way the music and The University Singers is singing sounds. a unique choir, compared to “You want to make your other organizations on cam- gestures as clear and simple pus, Cates said, because it is a as possible to get good re- class you take for credit, yet it sults,” Vogt said. Burnett, Mellencamp and King collaborated on the musical. Courtesy of Concord Music Group is also an organization with a Vogt is excited to direct student executive board. the primer vocal ensemble King It’s blue jeans music,” King other can act as chapters of little something that’s never He described the group group and be able to tour with from A12 said. a book moving forward and been seen before.” like a second family because them in Northern Maine and The musical, much to backward in time. For King, the opening they rehearse fve days a Canada this spring break. King’s satisfaction, is an old Billy Burke, from the performance, the frst of 19 week, for one hour each day. “Music, dance, theater, “I’m a total whore for fashioned radio play. “Twilight” saga, plays Joe shows throughout North “We tour the second week are some of the best things musicals,” King said. “I don’t like that creamy McCandless in the play and America, won’t be the end. of spring break all over New humans have ever done, and The play features 15 ac- broadway sound,” King Gina Gershon, from “Kill- “I’ll be sorry when England doing three shows that’s why I want to use my tors and a four-piece live said. er Joe” and “House of Ver- it’s done,” King said. But a day. Every four years we life doing that, bringing that band comprised of Mellen- Although he had little ex- sace,” plays Monique Mc- quoting Leonardo Da Vin- travel to Europe for a few to audiences,” Vogt said. camp’s concert band. King perience writing musicals, Candless. ci, King added, “[but] art weeks. You’re spending a lot Watching Vogt conduct his refers to the music as “blue King performed as part of The play, which pre- is never fnished; it’s only of time together doing some- rehearsal, he exemplifed all jeans” music, noting that Maine Masque during his mieres next week, may be abandoned.” thing that’s extremely person- the qualities he listed that an Mellencamp helped illumi- time at UMaine. He trans- different than the day be- The event is sponsored al, that’s making music. You exceptional conductor needs. nated some of the characters ferred the skills of writing fore. Mellencamp is still by The University of Maine have this feeling of comrad- The choir had clear admira- in the play through song, award-winning horror books working on the music. Foundation. Tickets are ery among everybody,” Cates tion for Vogt due to his warm adding emotion and reso- to writing a play by looking “The show is still evolv- available through the CCA said. personality, musical knowl- nance. at the stage as different set- ing,” King said. He is still at collinscenterforthearts. The last tour, Cates’ edge and overall fuidity, “We stripped it down as tings. Being able to move thinking of lines to give to com or by calling the box freshman year, they went to proving the reasoning behind far as we possibly could. from one backdrop to an- character. “You will see a offce at 207-581-1755. Austria, Switzerland and Ita- Cox’s decision.

Research Death Reporting System public policy and public from A12 (NVDRS) over the next fve health intervention. years. Sorg and Dr. Margaret Aside from this research UMaine professors Greenwald, a recently retired project, Sorg is also the medical examiner asked medical examiner, will lead consultant to chief medical her to do some consulting this project and look at vio- examiner in several states, in a career path as a foren- lent deaths such as domestic where she is called-in if she up for potential sic anthropologist. And so, abuse, homicide, suicide, and needs to examine a forensic she began her forensic work undetermined and frearm case. She says the exam- in 1977, earned her Ph.D. deaths. ination itself takes one to Grammy nomination in physical anthropology at According to the CDC, several days, but that foren- Ohio State in 1979, has done this is a national project sic consulting also involves forensic consulting in New spread across 32 states, and reporting and sometimes a Classical work accepted in frst round of nominations Hampshire since 1981 and because congress increased court case. earned her D-ABFA Amer- their funding, they were able “People don’t appreciate Danielle Walczak ican Board of Forensic An- to expand it to Maine. or realize how much time is Culture Editor thropology in 1983. The NVDRS provides put into these cases,” Sorg “Originally I didn’t want states with an understanding said of her reports, which The margins of Kath- to do consulting with re- of these deaths and seeks to range anywhere between 10- leen Ellis’ copy of Darwin’s cently dead people,” Sorg prevent violence and track 20 pages. “The Origin of Species” said. “But the chief insisted, progress over time. In 2011 She explains that in were flled with notes after and since I got involved, it’s more than 39,000 people Maine, her cases are typical- years of reading the book made all the difference.” died by suicide in the Unit- ly easy to identify, but occa- with her students in Honors The difference can be ed States, and the NVDRS sionally they cannot deter- 211. Notes that Ellis, a Uni- found in the long list of ac- believes that this system can mine the cause of death. She versity of Maine English complishments she has made help prevent these types of went on to say that some cas- professor, one day noticed as a professional, as well as tragedies. es need further investigation, were more like poetry. through her dedication to her “The goal of the CDC is and may need as much as 20 Soon after, she crafted career where she says she to prevent violent deaths, and years until they crack a case. over two dozen poems with works about 60-70 hours per in order to do that, you need But it is the challenge of themes emanating from week. to understand it,” Sorg said. the job that Sorg enjoys and Darwin’s most prominent Sorg is a multi-role per- The grant will be dis- wrestles with the most. She work in celebration of the son and has had a plethora of bursed in annual installment considers herself a prob- 150th anniversary of its experience in anthropologi- of $194,347 each year over lem-solver and puts most of publication. cal and epidemiology work the next fve years, and this her knack to work in outdoor The poems Ellis crafted Courtesy of Ravello Records and is a regularly published reporting system provides scenes dealing with recover- have since been set to mu- author on everything to do detail on demographics such ies such as burials. sic and recorded to make our ] self-understanding, very quick. Sometimes it’s with humans. At the Uni- as age, income and educa- “I fnd it mostly reward- the album “Dear Darwin.” and yet, who in the world nice to have a little time for versity of Maine, she is a tion, the method of injury, ing,” Sorg said in relation to The album was accepted in has been more ridiculed the words and thoughts to research associate professor the relationship between the her forensic work. “Except the frst round of nomina- for speaking his serious sink in.” jointly appointed to the De- victim and their offender and dealing with the smell of de- tions for a Grammy award. thoughts? To this day, if Ogle said an example partment of Anthropology, information about circum- composed remains.” Nancy Ogle, a UMaine his name comes up in or- would be the poem for the Climate Change Institute stances such as depression, Though her forte is in music professor, did vocals dinary conversation, it is letter P: “Playing House.” and Margaret Chase Policy fnancial stressors or rela- problem solving, Sorg said on the track, while Ginger likely to produce a smile. It reads “He plays a gar- Center. She also currently tionship problems. her job is not to be confused Hwalek, a UMaine piano Truly, a wonderful image of den / She plays a fruit tree teaches an anthropology and Sorg and Greenwald will with how the how it is por- professor, played the music the plight of modern man,” / They blossom. / He plays forensics course once a week also be able to do some of trayed in the American crime composed by Scott Brick- Ogle said of the importance the feld / She plays house / on campus. their own research where comedy-drama television se- man, a professor at UMaine of Darwin’s work. They abandon the garden.” “My goal is to get people they will collect statistical ries, “Bones.” Fort Kent. The collaborative work, Despite a short poem, interested in science, how analysis of the violent deaths “It’s fantasy,” she said. “It’s very strange when mesh poetry, piano and so- Ogle explains, “There’s their government works, in Maine and Vermont. The show is inspired by re- you sit down in an auditori- prano singing, focusing on so much in it, and it hap- how investigations are done “This is really is a won- al-life forensic anthropolo- um and hear your poems set observations of nature and pens so fast. Scott’s mu- in Maine and across the derful opportunity to make a gist Kathy Reichs, who Sorg to music. I was surprised human behavior. Brickman sic opens the poem more country, and get them inter- difference in terms of public says she’s well acquainted how close [the songs were]. works form relationships slowly than reading off a ested with issues of drug use health and yet it builds on my with. About half of the songs between piano and vocals. page; the audience is in- and the danger of substance background within public “She’s a friend of mine. were really accurate or add- “The piano part really vited stroll through the abuse,” Sorg said. safety and forensics,” Sorg She’s a colleague. We’ve ed a lot to my poems,” Ellis matches the mood of each experience. Darwin, both But the classroom doesn’t said. written an article together. said. song, said Hwalek, “It in his genius and in his take up the majority of her Sorg and Greenwald have She’s been in the feld for a The classical contempo- brings up Darwin and a his- foibles, is a wonderful time, she spends most of her worked together for years lot of years,” Sorg said. rary album from Ravello tory that is very important image of modern man. To days dedicated to national on projects related to violent And just as she doesn’t Records has 28 tracks, 26 for science and even liter- contemplate the human and state funded research deaths and their work related want her work to be por- beginning with a different ature and thought, philos- condition and smile — projects. to drug deaths is nationally trayed as it as in “Bones,” letter of the alphabet and ophy perhaps. It is a neat isn’t that what art is all “One hundred percent recognized and has guid- she does not partake in “typi- two instrumentals. Ellis journey through that kind about?” of my income comes from ed drug policy decisions in cal” Halloween festivities. calls the 26 tracks an abece- of thought process.” Those involved with grant activity,” Sorg said in Maine. “I think people should darium, where a collection For Ogle, the poetry and “Dear Darwin” are not relation to her research work. “We work really well to- have fun, but my approach is of poems are arranged in al- composition meld together allowed to speak further In October, Maine Attor- gether so this experience a more serious one because I phabetical order within the nicely. about what the Gram- ney General Janet T. Mills will be a positive thing,” see some of the worst parts album. “Scott did such a beau- my nomination entails or announced in a news release Sorg said. “She’s got a lot of of society,” Sorg said. “[Darwin] made an enor- tiful job with the settings,” when they will get further that the state of Maine will knowledge.” Sorg says in her free time mous contribution to our she said. “Kathleen’s poetry information on the nomi- receive almost $1 million Sorg also feels it’s very she enjoys playing the piano, scientifc knowledge and is brilliant, often witty and nation process. in funding from the federal important that the University even though it’s not some- CDC to gather critical data and state are collaborating on thing she does often. “I love on violent deaths in Maine this project together because work — that’s the primary @themainecampus using the National Violent she believes it will improve thing I do,” she said. Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine Campus Culture • A11 Reviews MUSIC MOVIE GAME Deerhoof “Nightcrawler” “Voice Commander” “La Isla Bonita”

Polyvinyl Bold Films Microsoft

Derrick Rossignol John Logan Kyle Hadyniak Editor in Chief RATING Contributor RATING Staff Writer RATING There are bands who The news is riddled Microsoft, with little fan- wear their influences on with imagery of crime fare, recently released a free, every available sleeve: scenes, houses that are voice-centric arcade top- Wolfmother owes a debt on fire, car crashes and down shooter on the Xbox to Black Sabbath and Led 7 more. Footage of horrible 8.5 One. The game “Voice Com- 8 Zeppelin, Interpol have things that happen in our mander” is a program devel- taken a page from Joy world viewed by audi- oped by Microsoft Garage, a Division’s playbook, and to Deerhoof’s version of ences everywhere. Have being in a world of con- team of Microsoft engineers, should also be praised for its Bjork is often reminiscent Earth. you ever wondered who stant demands to succeed interns and other employ- local multiplayer. The game of a wailing child. Disparate influences captures these events on are fully explored. The ees. Microsoft Garage has supports up to eight Xbox Then there are sea- are abound: “God 2” is like camera? Or the extent script was so well written, several low-level projects in One controllers, so you and soned veterans Deerhoof, the group’s take on Eric they are willing to go to in fact, that it is a wonder the works, and “Voice Com- your seven closest friends can who have said their latest Johnson’s “Cliffs of Do- capture it? how this film would have mander” represents their frst join together against the innu- album, “La Isla Bonita,” ver.” “Black Pitch” is akin In ’s film, wound up if someone else attempt at a game for Mic- merable alien hordes thrown which is scheduled for to a slightly more ambient “Nightcrawler,” starring had directed it. Gilroy rosoft’s next-gen console. at you. As anybody can is- release tomorrow, was Sleater-Kinney. “Paradise , we dive has moments of greatness While its visuals may be sue commands, even if they kickstarted by an attempt Girls” combines the lyr- head first into the dark, in this film, but “Night- simple, “Voice Commander” aren’t controlling a ship, this to emulate their own cov- ical playfulness of Devo unsettled night-life of crawler” could have proves to be a surprisingly means anybody in the room er of Ramones song “Pin- with catchy bass lines. Louis Bloom as he strives soared to an even higher fun game, perfect for groups can build turrets, move Vox, head.” That effort yielded The tight rhythm section to capture these horrific level if it was in the hands of people looking to kill or issue special attacks. As “Exit Only,” the record’s on “Oh Bummer” is ac- events closer and more of another director. some time. such, “Voice Commander” is noisy, punk-rooted sixth cented with reverb-heavy efficiently than anyone The greatest scenes Resembling the classic a great choice for entertain- track that completed its post-punk guitar stabs that else. in this film are when “Asteroids” in both game- ing guests. Unfortunately, the mission. can be disorienting if the “Nightcrawler” is an Gyllenhaal is trekking play and visuals, “Voice game doesn’t support online While punk is straight- bass falls back in the mix. intriguing and visceral through the city, or scop- Commander” by no means multiplayer, not completely forward by nature, Deer- “La Isla Bonita” can- film bolstered by Gyllen- ing out a crime scene with stresses the Xbox One’s hard- surprisingly considering the hoof’s latest is anything not be appreciated fully haal’s performance. Not his camera held high. Gil- ware. As a small, color-coded game’s humble origins, but but, despite drawing heav- through casual listening. only is this one of Gyl- roy builds tension, and ship, players are tasked with the feature would have made ily from the genre. They The record is dense but lenhaal’s best roles, it is Robert Elswit, the film’s defending a planet, presum- the game’s multiplayer more lean on their influenc- expansive, accessible but without a doubt one of cinematographer, adds a ably Earth — the game offers accessible; how many Xbox es, sure, but having been exclusive, pop but punk, the best lead performanc- great visual flair to every no real storyline — against One owners have more than active for two decades, noise but melody. These es in a film this year and scene. It feels as if the au- increasingly diffcult waves one or two controllers? Deerhoof has learned their contradictions need to be definitely deserves rec- dience is out with Louis, of enemies. Players have the The game’s 25 achieve- own sense of adventure sorted through in order ognition come Academy surrounded by the crucial ability to place de- ments are a mix of prog- is their greatest mentor, to reach a palatable con- Award time. lights and suspenseful fensive turrets around Earth, ress-related and grinding which drummer Greg Sau- clusion, which for some Gyllenhaal’s charac- darkness of Los Angeles. and with four different types affairs. While it is fun to nier iterated on a press re- listeners, just may not be ter, Lou Bloom, is one The best moments in this of turrets; there is strategic try and make it through the lease for the album: “We able to happen. of the most interesting film were the ones that element in turret placement. game’s ever-hectic levels — don’t set out to create Not all listeners are and well-developed char- focus solely on Louis, Players can utilize special the highest achievement-re- masterpieces. The Deer- thrill-seekers. When Sau- acters seen in a film in and follow his character abilities, such a nuclear lated level is 40, a consid- hoof fan is a thrill-seeker. nier said he didn’t “set out 2014. He has absolutely either through a crime strikes, shockwave attacks, erable feat, indeed — some This is the latest volley in to create masterpieces,” no boundaries, and is not scene or through a situa- gravity bombs and an artif- achievements, such as killing an ongoing conversation he didn’t mean Deerhoof afraid to get involved into tion at home. You always cial intelligence called “Vox” 100,000 enemies, or building we’ve been honored to wasn’t trying to succeed a situation he isn’t invit- want to know what Lou is to help defend Earth. While 500 of each turret type, is hold for 20 years.” in making great records. ed in, whether it be re- going to do next. this all may seem standard groan-inducing. The typical This is evident not only He meant they were try- lated to his work or not. There were moments in arcade-fare, what makes player likely won’t play the on a song-by-song basis, ing to make interesting, He also always seems to this film that just weren’t “Voice Commander” unique game nearly enough to natu- but the songs themselves innovative, experimental, have a plan, and wants as attention grabbing or its reliance on Kinect voice rally earn every achievement, have multiple sections forward-thinking records. everything to go accord- thrilling as other scenes. commands. making earning some “Voice and ideas, even if they It’s not easy to break ing to it, even if he has to Perhaps, with a differ- Kinect games for the Commander” achievement rarely eclipse the 4-min- boundaries and sound make some enemies and ent director at the helm, Xbox One, and especially a monotonous affair. On the ute mark. Such is true commercial. Pop music stir up some trouble along this film could have been the Xbox 360, haven’t had bright side, the Xbox One’s in “Mirror Monster,” a is easily accepted, but not the way. Lou, for lack of gripping from beginning much critical success. For achievement system allows Warpaint-like, slow-and- easily remembered. More a better description, is a to end, without skipping Microsoft’s newest console, you to track your achieve- steady military march that experimental sounds have complete sociopath. Gyl- a beat. developers have been hesi- ments progress, so dedicated does fine for the first 100 the opposite life, and ulti- lenhaal does an amazing That being said, tant to include Kinect in their “Voice Commander” players seconds before seemingly mately, talent triumphs. job conveying with his “Nightcrawler” still man- games, as using the device can accurately judge how far deciding to start over be- As is par for the course, many nuances and body ages to thrill and Gyllen- saps resources that could oth- they have to go for certain fore quickly dying down there is no lack of explor- language throughout the haal holds the viewer’s erwise beneft a games visu- achievements. again. atory effort in Deerhoof’s film. Lou isn’t very good attention in every scene, als. As hardware capability For a completely free Moments like this may latest, and the only prob- with people and struggles making “Nightcrawler” isn’t a problem for “Voice game — no annoying mi- initially seem like a log- lem with that is first im- to find common ground mesh as a complete and Commander,” Microsoft Ga- cro-transactions, even — jam, but Deerhoof has pressions are hardly ever with them. His prima- great film much more rage went all-in and made “Voice Commander” offers never branded themselves accurate. Neither usually ry concern is success. than it could have. If Kinect vital to this game’s a pleasant experience for lo- as an accessible band, are second, third, fourth You can see hundreds Gyllenhaal had not been function. Players can or- cal multiplayer, a genre the and after repeated listens, and fifth impressions, so of things stirring inside in this film, it would not der turret placement around Xbox One is severely lack- these instances actually an informed opinion on Lou’s head based on the have been as effective or Earth with a quick command, ing. One has to wonder why become endearing, like the longevity of experi- way Gyllenhaal looks satisfying as it was. such as “Build fusion turret Microsoft didn’t choose to a satisfying mold-break- mental music is one that around the room, or how “Nightcrawler” in Delta Quadrant,” as well release such a game when the ing that ends up doing needs time to brew. Are his expression changes. was an unpredictable as special attacks and Vox Xbox One frst launched, as more good than harm. The these tracks truly innova- Gyllenhaal’s performance and intense ride. It movement. The Kinect is sur- “Voice Commander” offers a lack of comfort becomes tive and stronger than the was truly the greatest part was an adventure of prisingly accurate, rarely re- substantial argument in favor a commodity in its tradi- downward pull of time, this film had to offer. a loner living in Los quiring repeated commands. of the Kinect and its impres- tional structural defiance. or are their quirks merely Dan Gilroy’s script Angeles that finds In some cases, Kinect may sive voice capabilities. The On the flip side, there novelties whose appeal is was well written. It a purpose. Gyllen- confuse the terms “Gam- lack of online multiplayer is are times when Deerhoof impermanent? makes the viewer ques- haal holds the film ma” and “Beta,” referencing disappointing, and some may are downright poppy. The Whatever the case, tion how close to reality on his shoulders with two of the quadrants around wish the game’s graphics main riff in “Big House the conversation be- the events portrayed in his magnetic perfor- Earth, which may hinder took advantage of the Xbox Waltz” is as earworm-y tween Deerhoof and this film are, even if it mance, and steals player strategy mid-combat, One’s powerful hardware, as Top-40 radio, but dis- its fans remains on- is a work of fiction. We every frame of this but otherwise issuing voice but overall “Voice Com- sonant guitars and uncon- going, with no lack of are taken into the shady film. It doesn’t quite commands is a smooth expe- mander” is a no-brainer for ventional rhythmic pat- engaging discussion world of nightly news. reach the heights as rience. fans of top-down stick shoot- terns bring the track back topics. Questions of morality and it could have. “Voice Commander” ers or local multiplayer. TWEET US @themainecampus Culture Monday, November 3, 2014 NEW AND UPCOMING RELEASES COLUMN Storytone, Nov. 4 Reviews How I Hear It , Inspiral Carpets Nov. 4 Nov. 4 Deerhoof, “La Isla Bonita” The making of a Gruff Rhys, American Interior Nov. 5 “Nightcrawler” perfect mixtape. Interstellar (in theaters) “Voice Commander” Big Hero 6 (in theaters) Nov. 7 A9 A Most Wanted Man (on DVD) Nov. 4 A11 University Singers welcome new director Student-based choir group will perform thier frst concert of the season this weekend go! What’s happening in and around Orono this week

Monday, Nov. 3

Meditation Monday 5:15 p.m. Wilson Center, 67 College Ave.

Tuesday, Nov 4

Chamber Jazz Con- cert 7:30 p.m. Minsky Hall

Wednesday, Nov 5 Screening of The Canary Effect 6:45 p.m. Wilson Center, 67 College Ave.

Thursday, Nov 6 The University Singers performing in one of thier shows last spring. Danielle Walczak, Culture Editor Lecture: The Quest Jocelyn Nerney get used to Vogt, who has a “I thought it was time for a at UMaine. “Music and all art, I think Staff Writer different conducting style and change. I knew the offce was Vogt comes from a musi- its value is that it lifts you for Proft and the approach to music. going to be open, and I felt cal family, with three broth- out of your mundane world. Subversion of Beauty The University Singers “He was familiar with the like I had the experience that ers, one sister, and parents That’s why we’re attracted to 12:30 to 1:45 p.m. will be giving their frst per- group and had conducted oth- I could bring to the table. A all involved in singing, they it. By doing that, it shows you Bangor Room, Union formance under a new direc- er choirs at the University and big part of it was the fact that listened to the Metropolitan possibilities that you couldn’t tor, Francis Vogt, on Saturday still does. It was a pretty easy I had worked with [Vogt] for Opera on the radio every Sat- of come up with on your own. and Sunday, Nov. 8 and 9. transition to bring him on two and a half years already,” urday. It shows you various aspects New Writing Series: This will be the frst perfor- board,” Cates said. Cates said. He conducts the Univer- of life and humanity,” Vogt Alice Notley, poetry mance in 37 years without the Cates has been in the Cates said the community sity Singers and the Oratorio said. 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. direction of Dennis Cox, who University Singers since his can look forward to some- Society, which is made up of Vogt said in order to be a IMRC, Stewart retired last year. freshman year, and he also thing they have never seen student and community mem- good conductor, you need to Commons Morgan Cates, a fourth- sang with The Maine Stein- before with the University bers. have strong leadership skills. year business management ers up until this year. Cates Singers due to Vogt, who was Vogt teaches choral con- “The music and the way student, with minors in music was president of the Steiners handpicked by Cox to be his ducting classes, or how to the music is going to sound Friday, Nov 6 and leadership studies, is the during his second and third successor. become a conductor. This in performance is fltered president of the University year, and he was also vice “[Vogt] brings to the table includes how to move your through one person, so there’s Lecture: The Con- Singers this year, but he is not president of the University a whole new personality. It’s arms, gestures, studying your a lot of responsibility. You text and Culture of new to the choir. Singers during his third year. very exciting,” Cates said. music or score preparation, should know the music better Collective Action: As president, Cates over- As a senior, Cates said he Along with conducting how to cue the various parts than anyone else,” Vogt said. sees everyday operations of wanted a change, and due to two choirs, Vogt is the direc- and knowing the score well He also emphasized know- Insights from Coastal the choir, but he is also help- a lot of factors, his wish fell tor of Choral Activities, and enough so you guide it along Ecuador ing the choir transition as they into place. oversees all four of the choirs in the performance, Vogt said. See Director on A10 12 to 1 p.m. Winslow Hall

Faculty Recital: Mar- UMaine researcher to Musical by cia Gronewold Sly & Ginger Hwalek 7:30 p.m. study violent deaths Stephen Minsky Hall CDC grants UMaine $1 million in funding King, John Saturday, Nov. 8 2014 International Culturefest Mellencamp to 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Recreation Center

open at CCA University Singers 7:30 p.m. Performance will be frst on Minsky Hall

national tour for “Brothers of Ghost Brothers of Darkland County” Darkland County 8 p.m. Danielle Walczak was, ‘Are you going to be CCA Culture Editor a chicken s--- on me like that?’” King said of Mellen- “Brothers of Darkland camp. “So I said okay.” Sunday, Nov. 9 County,” a musical written The musical opens with Sorg will lead a new investigation on violent deaths. Josh Quinit, Staff Photographer by King, a Maine horror two brothers fghting in University Singers novelist, will open its na- their cabin. When their dad 2 p.m. Maddi Shaw ly retired medical examiner her way to pursue nursing as tional tour at The University gets them to calm down, Minsky Hall Staff Writer Margaret Greenwald will be a career after graduating with of Maine Collins Center for he tells them the story of leaders on a $1 million proj- a Registered Nurse degree the Arts (CCA) on Nov. 8 at his own two dead brothers, “Some people like us- ect funded by the Center for from Fairview Park School 8 p.m. and Nov. 9 at 2 p.m. Jack and Andy McCandless, Ghost Brothers of ing skeletal motifs as dec- Disease Control and Preven- of Nursing in 1969, but her Over the past 13 years, King who were killed in an acci- Darkland County orations, but I’m not one of tion (CDC) funded project professional life path took a has collaborated with Amer- dent. The musical focuses 2 p.m. those people,” said Dr. Mar- studying violent deaths, such clear turn. ican singer-songwriter John on themes of fraternal love, CCA cella Sorg, medical and fo- as domestic abuse, homicide She earned her M.A. in Mellencamp and musical lust, jealousy and revenge. rensic anthropologist. and suicide. anthropology at Ohio State director T Bone Burnett to The brothers’ ghosts are Sorg does not “sensation- After taking a course in University in 1975, and create their southern gothic trapped in the Mississippi alize” death — Halloween fossil evidence for human then shortly after moving musical. cabin haunting the family is society’s way of denying evolution in her earl 20s, to Maine in 1976, the chief When Mellencamp ap- now living there. how serious it is. Sorg acquired an interest for proached King about writ- Sorg, along with recent- studying bones. She was on See Research on A10 ing a musical, “The subtext See King on A10 Sports Monday, November 3, 2014 UMAINE RESULTS WOMEN’S ICE HOCKEY 10/30 Field Hockey vs. UNH Loss 3-2 FIELD HOCKEY UMaine earns win, tie 10/31 Men’s Ice Hockey vs. UMass Amherst Win 6-5 Black Bears drop OT thriller Women’s Ice Hockey at Northeastern Tie 3-3 Black Bears tie UConn 11/01 Men’s Ice Hockey vs. UMass Amherst Win 3-2 UMaine falls 3-2 to Friday, edge out UNH in fnal regular Northeastern Saturday. Women’s Basketball vs. McGill Win 81-41 season contest Men’s Basketball at USM Loss 78-73 B2 B2 Conference scores, standings and upcoming schedule on B4 Men’s ice hockey sweeps UMass at home

Anthony Panciocco & gave up two of the 12 shots Jacob Posik he faced in the first peri- The Maine Campus od in similar fashion. The Black Bears first found the The University of Maine back of the net on the pow- men’s ice hockey team won er play just 4 minutes into a pair of tightly contested the contest. Morgan skat- games over the weekend ed into the slot and took a against the University of wrist shot that deflected off Massachusetts Amherst by Dill’s chest. Skating in to scores of 6-5 and 3-2. The scoop up the leftovers was Black Bears improve to first-year wing Malcolm 3-4-1 on the season and 2-0 Hayes who fired a shot past in Hockey East play while the sprawled out Dill for a the Minutemen fall to 2-5-0 1-0 Black bear lead. and 1-4-0 in Hockey East. The Black Bears dou- UMaine takes down bled their lead on a goal UMass in barn burner by second-year center Cam Second-year right wing Brown, his team-leading Brian Morgan fired a fourth of the year. Brown’s one-timer slap shot from goal was nearly identical the right faceoff circle that to Hayes’. In the offen- found its way to the back sive zone after a faceoff, of the net through UMass Ben Hutton ripped a slap first-year netminder Henry shot from the point at Dill. Dill’s five hole to propel Dill managed to deflect the the University of Maine puck with the blocker but to a 6-5 overtime win Fri- Brown found the puck off day night at Alfond Are- the rebound exactly where na. Black Bears third-year Hayes did, and fired a wrist UMaine third-year Steven Swavely competes for a puck Friday James Winters, Contributor center Steven Swavely shot top shelf for the 2-0 notched also notched two lead. deked his way through to have a great start,” ine defender to the crease defense rendered one more goals in the contest to help The second period was a traffic before whiffing on Swavely said. and chipped the puck short goal before the end of the Maine win its first Hockey much different story. After a point blank shot in the After Swavely’s first side past Black Bears sec- second period. This time East battle of the year. tallying their third unan- slot. Swavely retrieved the goal, Maine deflated. Their ond-year goaltender Matt the Minutemen forecheck “I’d like to say it’s prob- swered goal, Maine relin- loose puck with his back to defense wasn’t sound, and Morris. stole the puck at mid ice, ably the most exciting one quished its 3-0 lead and the net and sent a sweep- they gave up three quick Kravchenko wasn’t done with second-year wing Ray so far for me, but anytime gave up three consecutive ing shot through Dill’s five goals to give the Minute- there. His aggressive fore- Pigozzi and second-year you score in the Alfond, it’s goals to the Minutemen to hole to add another tally men life. check allowed him to tally center Steven Iacobellis big. I’m just glad we got knot the game at 3-3. for the 3-0 lead. The first Minute- another goal. After steal- on a two on zero skating the win, glad I put it away,” Maine added to its lead “We’ve had a little bit men goal was scored by ing the puck, Kravchenko towards Morris. Iacobellis Morgan said. to begin the period on a of a slow start to the sea- first-year center Dennis deked past a Black Bear, passed across the crease to The Black Bears came wrist shot through the five son, but our captain made Kravchenko. Kravchenko skated behind the net and Pigozzi who chipped the firing on all cylinders, hole of Dill by third-year it clear to us that this is our received a puck in stride wrapped around, beating puck in for an easy goal dominating time on attack center Steven Swavely. first Hockey East weekend, up ice from second-year Morris to the opposite post to knot the game at three and peppering Minutemen On a fast rush up ice, first- this is when it really starts defender Marc Hetnik. to tighten the score 3-2. netminder Henry Dill. Dill year wing Liam Pecararo for us, and this our chance Kravchenko raced a UMa- The Black Bears sloppy See Hockey on B2 Women’s basketball Plans for new turf feld blows out McGill at Lengyel in the works

Michael Schuman said, “I was fully behind most costly part of the proj- Contributor [the project] and decided I ect. wanted to get on board and “We’re taking it slow- The plans for install- spearhead the project... I ly, making sure everything ing an artifcial surface wanted to work on this spe- is being done correctly,” on Lengyel Gym Field on cifcally.” Conant said. “This feld campus have been passed Conant has been working will revolutionize intramu- around different campus or- primarily with Jeff Hunt, ral sports.” ganizations in the last few the director of the New Bal- Right now, feasibility weeks. This feld, which ance Recreation Center on studies are being done to would be installed for the campus, to get the project see if the University and intramural teams, would re- off the ground. students are ready, willing place the torn up, old feld “We’re at the ‘dream and able to adopt this feld. currently used primarily by phase,’” Hunt said on the Fundraising options have the marching band and the project’s current status. also been discussed, and rugby teams. “This is something that everything from donations The idea has been foat- would be of great value to to fnding an angel investor ing around the student body the students who participate have been brought to the and different campus de- in recreational activities table. partments for the last fve here on campus.” “I don’t think you would Sophie Weckstrom helped secure a UMaine win Saturday James Winters, Contributor years. The focus on Lengyel According to Hunt, the fnd anybody who wouldn’t began long before this idea feld would be open to ev- think it’s a good idea. Fund- Anthony Panciocco Alexandria Kiss-Rusk’s six of Maine head coach Richard came to being, when the eryone for recreational use ing it is a different story,” Sports Editor points in the frst 5 minutes. Barron said. “We managed to idea to light Lengyel Gym at any time of the day. Hunt said on fnding capital The early points from Kiss- rebound fairly well. I felt like Field had been passed “We want to do it. Right to fund the project. The University of Maine Rusk held the score to a 9-8 that’ll be an effective defense around. now its been internal to us. But more important than women’s basketball team UMaine lead through 5 min- for us, which we really hav- UMaine is home to thou- We haven’t brought it to the funding will be student showed a glimpse into what utes. en’t had as an option for the sands of students, many planning committee yet. It support. Hunt says that the could be a fruitful 2014-2015 UMaine went on a 17-5 frst three years here.” participating in multiple really hasn’t gone beyond New Balance Recreational season Saturday afternoon, run beginning at 15:03, spear- The Black Bears’ defense intramural leagues. Some our offce,” Hunt said. Center came to be because enjoying an 81-41 exhibition headed by Anderson’s seven held the Martlets to 25.9 per- nights during the height of The idea has been passed of the support it received rout of McGill at the Memo- points during the stretch to cent shooting from the feld, the seasons, there could be from student government from students, and the turf rial Gym. increase the Black Bears’ lead while UMaine shot 55.4 per- between 25-35 games be- and campus recreation, all feld will be no different. The Black Bears were led to 27-15 halfway through the cent and 38.9 percent from ing played. This has caused the way to the President’s Students are into the by fourth-year guard Court- frst frame. beyond the arc. problems in the past with offce and the Provost of the idea, from the student gov- ney Anderson, who scored 19 The Black Bears tight- The scoring was well- trying to fnd feld space for University. According to ernment level all the way to points on a perfect 7-7 shoot- ened up defensively for the spread out for the Black Bears varsity and club sports, as Conant and Hunt, the proj- the students who participate ing from the feld. rest of the half, allowing just at halftime, with no player in well as intramural teams. ect could cost an upwards in the sports themselves. “I can take good shots, and four more points while they the double digits. Third-year Spearheading the project of $3 million, but that is a Dan Vaughn, a fourth-year that’s what I did today,” An- cruised to a 46-19 halftime forward Liz Wood helped An- is Student Body President rough estimate. There has student at UMaine, par- derson said. “When I do that, lead that was punctuated by derson facilitate the offense Justin Conant, who cited yet to be an offcial esti- ticipates in fve different it makes things a lot easier for a three-pointer from frst-year and lock down on defense the project as one of the mate made, as the project intramural sports as well me and my teammates, too.” guard Parise Rossignol. early, dishing out four frst- reasons he wanted to stay in is still in its early stages. as acting as the intramural McGill managed to stay “I thought our pressure, half assists and pulling down student government. According to Hunt, the lev- coordinator for the Alpha with the Black Bears early, for the most part, was really “This is why I wanted to eling of the feld before the thanks to third-year center good in the zone,” University See Basketball on B3 run for reelection,” Conant turf even goes in will be the See Turf on B3 B2 • Sports The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014 Depth a strength Field hockey falls on senior day for women’s basketball

Adam Hitchcock conference play over his Contributor first three seasons. However, the 2013-14 season renewed As the University of hope for UMaine. Barron Maine women’s basketball led the Black Bears to a 17- season draws near, the Black 15 record on the year, 10-6 Bears are primed for a big in conference play, and the season. UMaine was voted school’s first postseason win fifth in the preseason coach- since 1999. es’ poll in which the Univer- The Black Bears certain- sity at Albany was voted No. ly have higher expectations 1, followed by Stony Brook for this coming season, par- University, Hartford Univer- ticularly with the potential sity, and the University of of their team. Coach Barron New Hampshire rounding out was optimistic about what the top four. it would mean to reach their “I think there’s a lot of preseason goals. teams who have a shot… Al- “It would mean that we bany, Hartford, Stony Brook, did a good job, and that our us — I think all four teams kids were coming close to probably have a shot at win- reaching their potential, and ning the league this year,” that’s what we’re really af- Nicole Sevey fghts for the ball in a win against UNH on Thursday afternoon Aley Lewis, Photo Editor UMaine head coach Richard ter,” he said. “We don’t really Barron said of the America talk about things like that… Adam Hitchcock The Black Bears an- to decide the contest. UMaine was held to ten East Conference. We’re just trying to focus on Contributor swered near the end of the The Wildcats scored 10 shots on the game, and “We don’t pay attention,” getting better. We try not to frst half with third-year their game winner when only three penalty corners. Barron answered when asked measure ourselves against The University of Maine midfielder Marissa Shaw’s third-year Emma Compag- When asked about the Black how accurately the fifth-place others, just measure ourselves feld hockey team ended their rocket into the net past na found a rebound and put Bears chances in the Amer- vote represented his team. against our potential.” regular season play with a fourth-year netminder Carlie it past Cochran for the 3-2 ica East tournament, Anna- Third-year forward Liz Barron will be sending a home game against the Uni- Tarbell to knot things up at victory. belle Hamilton said: “I defi- Wood was voted to the pre- fairly young squad out onto versity of New Hampshire 1-1. Head coach Robin nitely think we can take ‘em season All-Conference team the court this season, though that ended in a heartbreaking Fourth-year midfielder Balducci spoke a little on her in the semis.” The UMaine for the Black Bears. Last sea- they do have a good mix of overtime loss on Senior Day. Zoe Berkey’s wasted no time defense: “Well, obviously Black Bears will get anoth- son, Wood was the only play- third-year players. Fourth- Seven seniors were rec- in the second half, fnding very proud that we can hold er crack at UNH as they will er in America East to rank in year guard Courtney Ander- ognized by the University of the back of the net at the Maine to eleven shots, that’s face off again on Thursday, Top 10 in the league in scor- son is the only resident se- Maine, including Becca Pa- 36:45 mark, giving the Black a small victory,” said UNH Nov.ember 6th at 4 p.m. in ing, rebounding, field goal nior on the team, with four radee, Zoe Berkey, Bri Rob- Bears a 2-1 lead. head coach Robin Balducci. Albany, N.Y., the number percentage and assists. freshmen on the squad in ertson, Abbey Gutowski, The Wildcats would not “When you have a senior one seed. “She’s been a very Parise Rossignol, Christiana Holly Stewart, and Hannah be denied, as second-year goalkeeper, you can do a lot “It’s been a pretty special good player, very versatile, Gerostergiou, Janessa Faun- Keating. midfielder Lindsey Ner- of things.” experience. This is a great hard-working, a leader for the troy and Kirsten Johnson. First-year netminder bonne tied the game up just 9 “Well, obviously very university, a great communi- team… She does a little bit “I don’t think it’s a lot of Emma Cochran got the start minutes later. The rest of the proud that we can hold ty, and a great field hockey of everything for us,” Barron pressure, I think it’s a lot of in net for the Black Bears, second half was a defensive Maine to eleven shots, that’s team to be a part of,” fourth- said. opportunity,” said Barron but at the 15:14 mark when battle, with the Black Bears a small victory,” said UNH year forward Holly Stewart Barron is entering his on the responsibility of his second-year back Jackie playing some hard-nosed de- head coach Robin Balducci. said. “I think being here has fourth season at the helm upperclassmen. “This core Hozza found the back of the fense as the Wildcats dom- “When you have a senior developed my game a lot, for the Black Bears. He has cage to give the Wildcats an inated time of possession. goalkeeper, you can do a lot and I’ve met so many amaz- a record of 29-62, 17-30 in See Preview on B3 early 1-0 lead. Regular time was not enough of things.” ing people.” MacSorley leads UMaine on road swing

Michael Schuman Sakundiak was credited with the scoring in the second cy and Chuli keeping their fed second-year defenseman up the only goal, Desjardins Contributor the assist. period of action. Redshirt teams in the game. Maine Kristin Gilmour who beat played a solid game in net UConn answered right third-year forward Caitlin did have a power play for Northeastern fourth-year for the Huskies, stopping 28 The University of Maine back with a goal of their own Hewes passed the puck over the fnal minute of the over- goaltender Chloe Desjardins shots, 15 of which came in women’s ice hockey team at 3:13 of the frst period to to fourth-year forward Kay- time period, but were unable to give Maine the 1-0 lead. the third period when Maine was on the road for a pair tie the game at one. First- la Campero who buried it to to convert. Maine was 0-1 That would be all the outshot the Huskies 15-2. of Hockey East conference year forward Theresa Knut- tie the game at 2-2. with the man advantage, scoring for the game, but After the weekend’s ac- games versus the University son received a pass from Maine would get the next while UConn was 0-2. there were plenty of chances tion, Maine improves to 4-5- of Connecticut and North- fourth-year forward Sarah goal to take the lead again at Maine outshot the Hus- for both teams on the power 2 overall (3-1-1 WHEA). eastern University Huskies. MacDonnell, and then beat 8:46 of the second period. kies 38-32, but the goalies play as this game got physi- UConn became 2-4-4 over- Maine was able to tie UConn Maine goaltender Meghann Third-year forward Abbey shined late, Treacy record- cal. The Huskies committed all (0-0-1 WHEA), and 3-3 on Friday night and then Treacy to get the equalizer. Cook found Hailey Browne, ing 29 saves and Chuli mak- three penalties and Maine Northeastern drops to 2-4-3 get a 1-0 win over North- The last goal of the frst whose shot beat Huskies’ ing 35. drew six, but both teams (1-2-0 WHEA). Maine cur- eastern on Saturday night. period was scored by UMa- third-year netminder Elaine Maine Takes Down were unable to convert on rently sits atop the Hock- Maine Ties UConn ine third-year defenseman Chuli. Northeastern the power play, Maine going ey East standings after fve On Friday night, Maine Kelsey MacSorley, who The Black Bears’ lead Saturday night’s contest 0-2 and Northeastern going conference games played, recorded their second tie scored her second goal in as lasted until the 19-minute was close, with both teams 0-5. There were matching holding a slim one point lead of the season in a tough many games at 11:18 of the mark in the second, when getting their chances. Maine minors in the third. over Boston College. 3-3 game in Storrs, Conn. frst to give the Black Bears a last-minute shot by frst- was the only team who The goaltending in this Maine will continue its The Black Bears opened the 2-1 advantage. Fourth- year defenseman Leah Lum could convert, winning the game was excellent, Black road swing playing Brown the scoring early, as frst- year defenseman Brittany found the back of the net to game 1-0. Bear second-year goalten- University next weekend year forward Brooke Stacey Huneke and frst-year for- tie the game at 3-3. The only goal of the game der Mariah Fujimagari got before returning home to the scored just 46 seconds into ward Victoria Hummel as- The third period and the came at 11:02 of the frst pe- the start and posted a 20- Alfond to play the winless the opening period. Sec- sisted on the play. ensuing overtime period riod, when Stacey passed save shutout, the frst of her Providence College Friars ond-year forward Morgan UConn got the better of were scoreless, both Trea- the puck to Sakundiak who young career. Despite giving on Nov. 22-23.

Hockey more goals before the end “One thing we always The Minutemen bat- themselves and early hole went into the third frame from B1 of the third period, sending talk about is staying posi- tled hard throughout, but Saturday evening but man- down 2-0. the game into overtime. tive. We know we had five weren’t able to stop UMa- aged to come back for a late Shore got the Black The first UMass goal in minutes to win the game ine’s high powered offense 3-2 victory over UMass. Bears on the board when goals each. the third period was tallied and that’s all we were fo- in the contest. First-year netminder he tipped a shot from Ham- Maine would have the by fourth-year right wing cused on,” Swavely said Even with his team re- Sean Romeo saved 30 of ilton past the UMass net- last laugh before the end and captain Troy Power. after the game. linquishing a three-goal the 32 shots he was tasked minder to bring UMaine of the period, however. Setting up in the offensive The Black Bears avoid- lead, then a two goal lead with, bouncing back from back into the game. Fourth-year wing Connor zone, first-year left wing ed the scare and ended the to force overtime, Black a difficult beginning to the The Black Bears tied Leen found third-year cen- Patrick Lee sent a pass game just 57 seconds into Bears’ coach Red Gendron season between the pipes. things up at 2-2 at the ter and captain Devin Shore across the slot from behind the overtime period. In was pleased with his teams’ “If it weren’t for Sean 12:42 mark when Pecararo behind the net for a wrap- the net that found Power the offensive zone, third- mental toughness through- Romeo, we would have circled behind the net and around goal of his own to at the point. Power sent a year defender Conor Riley out the night. been down three or four launched a shot past Mas- give Maine a 4-3 lead go- wrist shot back across to found Shore in the slot. “Bad things happen,” goals,” Gendron said. talerz to even things up. ing into the final period. the far post and beat Morris Shore passed the puck out Gendron said. “We don’t “He played a magnificent Byron scored the game Maine built on its lead glove side to cut the deficit to Morgan at the right fa- practice to give up leads, game.” winner in the final min- early in the third period. in half, 5-4. ceoff circle. Morgan sent we don’t practice to make Kravchenko netted his ute of play. His third goal Pecararo received a pass The game tying goal one timer through traffic mistakes defensively. third goal of the weekend of the season came when in the offensive zone from came from fourth-year de- that trickled through the Sometimes in the heat of in the second period when Mastalerz was out of po- first-year left winger Nolan fender Mike Busillo, the five hole of Dill for the 6-5 the game, when you’re he took a pass from Power sition and gave the Black Vesey. Pecararo skated into first goal of his collegiate overtime win. playing an opponent with and put it past a sprawling Bears the 3-2 advantage the slot and fired a point career. “The big thing for us is some very good offensive Romeo for the 1-0 Minute- that would win them the blank shot on Dill. Swave- Busillo tested Morris’ never get down. We gave players, if you’re not ex- men advantage. game. ly skated in from the left glove side again and found up that fifth goal with 2 actly in the right spot at the UMass scored again The Black Bears outshot faceoff circle and sent an the back of the net to tie the minutes left, and we had right time, they can make when Vatrano beat Romeo Umass 38-32, despite be- easy rebound shot by Dill game 5-5. Lee fired a pass to attack the last two to a play. Which obviously, with a one-timer to put the ing outplayed for the first for a 5-3 Black Bear lead, back to Busillo at the point. get into overtime. We said they did tonight. The fact Black Bears in a 2-0 hole two periods. Swavely’s second goal in Busillo hesitated, then from the start we’re gonna that we stuck with it is pret- and take the air of the Al- UMaine will take to the the contest. fired a slap shot to the op- win it this shift, and we at- ty cool, and it’s important.” fond. ice next when they travel to Despite the two goal posite post that beat Morris tacked, and we did what we UMaine comeback tops The Black Bears strug- the University of Vermont deficit, the Minutemen through traffic to even the wanted to do, so it was big Minutemen gled offensively through for a two-game series next never quit, and tallied two score. for us,” Morgan said. The Black Bears dug the first two periods and weekend. Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine Campus Sports • B3 Aultman to chase NFL dreams Soccer loses to

Anthony Panciocco Sports Editor Great Danes University of Maine Anthony Panciocco score was Vega’s ninth goal fourth-year wide receiv- Sports Editor on the season. Vega leads the er Damarr Aultman is a Great Danes with 22 points self-professed “Madden The University of Maine on the season. nerd.” He grew up playing women’s soccer team saw Both teams settled down the game in his room for their season end in a 2-0 defensively in the second hours at a time and still en- America East quarterfnals half, with neither team al- joys playing Madden with loss to the University at Al- lowing much offense. his teammates today. But he bany Thursday evening. The Black Bears out- wants more than to just play The Black Bears put for- shot the Great Danes 20-10, Madden. He wants to be in ward a strong effort in the led by third-year midfeld- the game. loss, launching 21 shots, er Charlene Achille’s nine “In my life, I’ve always eight of which were on shots, four of which were on looked up to my father,” target. Second-year UMa- goal. Aultman said. “My father ine netminder Claudia Third-year goalkeeper always told me that if you Dube-Trempe saved three of Alana Brennan was stout in love it, you have to put your the fve shots she was tasked goal for the Great Danes, all in it. He really instilled in with. saving all eight shots she me at a young age that, you The Great Danes man- was tasked with. Brennan know, these video games are aged three corner kicks, has been stellar this season, fun now, but there’s going to while the Black Bears could allowing just 1.26 goals per come a day when you have not generate a single corner game with a .805 save per- to put down the video games kick in the contest. centage. and someday, hopefully, be Aultman has caught fve touchdowns this season File Photo Second-year midfelder The Great Danes’ victo- in the video games.” Caitlyn Paltsios got the scor- ry could have been by more Aultman was not a high cesses, Aultman refuses to Throughout his career at since Aultman came aboard. ing started for Albany in the than just two goals consider- prospect coming out of high take credit for his play. UMaine, Aultman has been When he joined the team 13th minute by sending a ing the four offsides penal- school. He was a track and “We’re really just look- a leader on the team. He has back in 2010, he admitted rocket towards Dube-Trem- ties that stalled out potential football star at Half Hollow ing to play together and be a played with four different that they were not the co- pe, who managed to defect it scoring chances for Albany. Hills West High School in family,” he said of his fellow quarterbacks and produced hesive band of brothers that but it rolled past her and into Dube-Trempe allowed a Wheatley Heights, New receivers. “If my friend Art’s consistent stats throughout they are now, but they’ve goal for a 1-0 Albany advan- pair of early goals, but was York. UMaine was one of (Arthur Williams) catching his four years starting for the come a long way. tage. Redshirt second-year her usual lockdown self for the only high-level schools the ball I have to be sure I’m Black Bears. When asked “I’m just blessed to have defenseman Celia Balf was the rest of the game. A fnal- that gave him a chance. getting the block for him.” how he gets away from the what I consider brothers credited with the assist on ist for America East Player “I’m always grateful here Aultman stands at 5 feet, pressure and constant foot- around me every day,” Ault- the play. of the Year, Dube-Trempe because, at the end of the man said. The Great Danes scored fnishes the season with just day, I was under-recruited Aultman keeps his expec- their second goal just six a .80 goals against average and nobody really gave me tations high. His pro football minutes later when frst-year and a .849 save percentage. a shot,” Aultman said. “At ambitions are within reach forward Vivian Vega put The Black Bears’ record the end of the day, I’m very “I’m always grateful here because, at the with the work ethic and be- a breakaway goal past the falls to 4-8-6 on the season, grateful because they gave end of the day, I was under recruited and lief in himself that he pos- Black Bears defense, giving while Albany improves to me an opportunity to come nobody really gave me a shot.” sesses, but he realized that Albany their 2-0 lead. The 7-8-5. up here and succeed.” professional football is nei- Coming to Maine was a Damarr Aultman ther guaranteed nor forever. large adjustment, but Ault- University of Maine wide receiver After his playing days are man made the adjustment done, he would like to return well. He redshirted his frst to New York. Walsh aims year, then caught 39 balls “I would love to go back for 575 yards and fve touch- 11 inches tall, just a tad short ball, he admits that he never home and give something downs in his frst collegiate for an elite wide receiver, really does. Not that it’s a back to the kids in my area, campaign. who are generally over 6 bad thing. give back to the communi- to change Now, nearing the end of feet tall. He has not let his “Even when I’m not ty,” Aultman said. “A lot of his career at UMaine, Ault- height hold him back, much playing football, I’m around those kids don’t have any di- man has earned the title of like his favorite NFL player, football players who talk rection in athletics. They’re culture of men’s Maine’s No. 1 receiving running back Barry Sanders. about football 24/7 so I’m out there running hills and threat. He won the Colonial “Through my life my fa- really not ever away from stuff with no proper train- Athletic Conference Cham- vorite football player of all- it,” Aultman said. “I love ing.” pionship with the Black time has been Barry Sand- playing Uno. Me and the At the end of his time basketball Bears last year, ranking third ers,” Aultman said. “His guys at the house play Uno. with the University of Maine in kickoff return yards per fashy style and the fact that We play for Uno for hours, football program, Aultman game in the CAA and aver- he’s little and underrated and making jokes, watching TV, had a simple way to put his Michael Bailey coach at Providence College, aged 42.3 yards per game always played with that chip being together.” feelings. Contributor which played in the former Big with fve scores. on his shoulder mentality are The bond among the “I’m proud to be a Black East Conference. Despite the personal suc- all things I looked up to.” wide receivers has grown Bear.” The Men’s Basketball Although the Men’s team Program at the University of sported zero seniors last year, Maine is ready to begin a new the team lost, as mentioned, a Turf now,” Vaughn said. Preview They also were tops in the era under frst-year coach Rob- few players to transfer; name- from B1 The benefts are there for from B2 league in assists per game ert Walsh. Coach Walsh is ded- ly, two of the Black Bears best the students, the proposal with 17.3. However, UMa- icated to building the team into performers in Xavier Pollard just needs to be feshed out. ine ranked dead last in the a contender. and Dimitry Coronel — UMa- Tau Omega fraternity on As for a timeline, the proj- group, this is their third year league in blocked shots per “Developing a champion- ine’s frst and third leading campus. He knows frst- ect is still so young that an together, so they understand contest, with only 1.5 blocks ship culture. That’s what we’re scorers, respectively, from a hand about the struggles of offcial start date has yet to what they’re facing and what per game. trying to do,” Walsh said. “We season ago. Pollard also re- sharing felds with the var- be determined. it takes.” The Black Bears also want our guys to understand ceived All-America East third sity and club teams, and this While this project is still A year ago, the Black ranked second in America who we are is what we do team recognition last season. has led to many scheduling in the “Dream Phase,” it Bears were ranked fourth in East in home attendance, with every day… We don’t defne Nevertheless, UMaine returns conficts, game cancella- could very well be a real America East in both scoring an average draw of 1,538 ourselves by wins and losses… a core of relatively young tal- tions and confusion. thing in a year or two. The offense and scoring defense, fans. We defne ourselves by what ent with just two fourth-year “We got told the wrong combined efforts of student scoring 66.2 points per game With an 81-41 rout of the we do everyday.” players on the roster. feld many times. So if there government and campus while rendering 60.9 points University of McGill on Sat- Walsh replaces UMaine’s Though the season is rap- was just an intramural feld recreation with the support per game. The Black Bears urday, things are certainly previous head coach of 10 idly approaching, Walsh made where you could go to play, of the students will really were the best in America moving in the right direction years, Ted Woodward, who it clear that the team was still that would be much simpler help get the project off the East in three-point field goal for the UMaine women’s bas- was fred after a disappointing getting their bearings. than the setup we have right ground. percentage, at .349 percent. ketball program. 6-23 last season and also saw “The frst time we talked four players request transfers. about a starting fve was today UMaine also lost three play- at lunch,” he said. Walsh went Basketball half that saw the Black Bears ward Sheraton Jones had a fect,” Wood said. “But I think ers to transfers the year before. on to explain, in reference to from B1 extending their lead to 57-23. strong showing, dishing out it was promising. We had Woodward’s career record as team leaders, “It’s too early to The Martlets were able to fve assists and scoring four some really good plays and the head coach of the Black tell. We want all of our guys to keep pace for the rest of the points. She also brought some bright moments that Bears was 117-178, good for a be leaders.” fve boards. Wood would go contest, being outscored just down fve hard-fought re- show what’s to come.” .397 winning percentage. Con- Despite an uncertainty on to score 15 points and 24-18 over the fnal 11:45. bounds. The Black Bears will be versely, Walsh comes to UMa- about what roles his players grabbing a team-high 11 re- They were led by third-year Despite McGill having a back on the hardwood Nov. ine from Division III Rhode Is- will play, he’s happy with his bounds. forward Miriam Sylla, who height advantage, the Black 10 when they host the Uni- land college where Walsh went roster, saying the group is both Messy play and a myriad pulled down 11 rebounds de- Bears outscored the Martlets versity of New Brunswick at 204-63, boasting a .764 win- coachable and hungry. of whistles highlighted the spite going 1-8 from the feld. 40-8 in the paint. the Cross Insurance Center at ning percentage. Walsh pre- frst 7 minutes of the second Second-year UMaine for- “I don’t think it was per- 7 p.m. viously served as an assistant See Walsh on B5 Cross country competes at AE Championship

Anthony Panciocco versity of Vermont, Univer- a second ahead of Prizzi and 25:35. Fourth-year Alex- The University of New Blaise and Amber Short took Sports Editor sity of Massachusetts-Low- Allen, who came in second ander Moser fnished his Hampshire dominated the 10th through 13th place to ell and Hartford University and third, respectively. fnal home race as a Black feld for the women’s race, sure up the victory for the The University of Maine also competed. Binghamton won the Bear in 23rd place at 25:45. taking nine of the Top 19 Wildcats. cross country teams hosted Men’s cross country men’s division, with fn- First-year Joshua Horne had spots for a blowout victory Third-year Black Bear the America East Champi- takes seventh in conference ishers taking 8th through a breakout race, taking 31st Saturday. Annabelle Wilson fnished at onships Saturday morning. Fourth-year Stony Brook eleventh place. Fourth-year place at 25:53. Second-year Wildcat Eli- 19:07, good enough for 31st The women’s team took runner Eric Speakman just Matt Johnson led the way for UMass Lowell fnished nor Purrier beat out third- place. Fourth-year Carolyn ninth place, while the men’s barely beat out fourth-year the Bearcats with a time of just three points behind year Stony Brook runner Stocker was not far behind, team fnished seventh. Stony Wildcat John Prizzi and 25:19. Binghamton for second Christina Melian to beat the fnishing in 34th place. Brook University, the Uni- third-year UMass Lowell Second-year Levi Frye place, while UMBC took feld with a time of 17:19 UNH scored just 26 versity of New Hampshire, runner Robert Allen for frst was the frst Black Bear to third with 85 points. over the 5K course. points Saturday, beating out the University of Maryland place. Speakman fnished cross the line, fnishing in UNH dominates wom- Third-year UNH runners second-place Stony Brook Baltimore County, the Uni- the 8K course in 24:41, just 13th place with a time of en’s race Brianna Boden, Samantha by nearly 40 points. B4 • Sports The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014 UPCOMING Around the Conference GAMES

FOOTBALL SCORES CONFERENCE STANDINGS CAA RECORD OVERALL Thursday, Nov. 6 11/1 Rhode Island 13 1 UNH 5-0 7-1 Field Hockey Delaware 28 2 Richmond 4-1 7-2 vs. UNH Villanova 9 3 Villanova 4-1 7-2 @ Albany Richmond 10 4 Delaware 3-2 5-4 4 p.m. William & Mary 24 5 Stony Brook 3-2 4-5 Men’s Basketball James Madison 31 6 James Madison 3-2 6-3 vs. Husson 7 p.m. Elon 19 7 Albany 2-3 6-3 Towson 21 8 William & Mary 2-3 5-4 Friday, Nov. 7

Albany 24 9 Maine 2-3 3-5 Women’s Ice Hockey UNH 49 10 Towson 2-3 4-5 at Brown 3 p.m. 11 Elon 0-5 1-8 12 Rhode Island 0-5 0-9 Women’s Swimming and Diving at BC 5 p.m..

Men’s Swimming and Diving vs. BC 5 p.m.

Men’s Ice Hockey at UVM WOMEN’S SOCCER SCORES CONFERENCE STANDINGS AE RECORD OVERALL 7 p.m.

10/28 Yale 3 1 Hartford 5-1-2 10-3-5 Saturday, Nov. 1 UMass Lowell 1 2 UMBC 4-2-2 12-4-3 Men’s Swimming and 10/30 UNH 1 3 UNH 4-2-2 7-8-4 Diving Binghamton 1 4 Albany 3-2-3 7-8-5 vs. UVM/BC 11 a.m. 11/02 Albany 2 5 Maine 2-1-5 4-8-6 Maine 0 6 Binghamton 3-3-2 7-9-3 Women’s Swimming and Diving UMBC 1 7 Stony Brook 2-4-2 5-10-2 vs. UVM/BC UNH 1 8 UMass Lowell 2-5-1 5-11-1 11 a.m. Hartford 1 9 Vermont 1-6-1 3-12-2 Women’s Ice Hockey Albany 0 at Brown 2 p.m.

Men’s Ice Hockey at UVM WOMEN’S FIELD HOCKEY SCORES CONFERENCE STANDINGS AE RECORD OVERALL 7 p.m. 10/31 Vermont 1 1 Albany 4-0 14-2 AROUND THE Albany 5 2 Maine 3-1 10-7 CONFERENCE Maine 2 3 UNH 3-1 6-11 UNH 3 4 Fairfeld 1-3 6-11 Tuesday Nov. 4

UMas Lowell 2 5 UVM 1-3 3-14 Women’s Soccer Fairfeld 3 6 UMass Lowell 0-4 5-12 Dartmouth at UMass UMass Lowell 1 11/01 Lowell Saint Louis 0 2 p.m. 11/02 UNH 4 Saturday, Nov. 1 Dartmouth 1 Field Hockey

Saint Louis at UMass Lowell 2 p.m.

Highlights from last week’s professional action Merrimack at Providence THE BIG TIME 7 p.m. Auburn University is Tempers fared after Sun- Mount St. Joseph’s Lau- The New England Patriots The Chicago Cubs hired Northeastern at UMass now the No. 3 team in the day’s NASCAR race when ren Hill, a terminal cancer took down Peyton Manning former Tampa Bay Rays Lowell country following a 35-31 Brad Keselowski spun out patient, scored four points to and the Denver Broncos 43- manager Joe Maddon to re- 7 p.m. victory against Ole Miss Jeff Gordon, igniting a brawl fulfll her dream of playing in 21 Sunday afternoon. Tom place former manager Rick Saturday afternoon. Missis- between the two racers. Gor- an college basketball game Brady threw for 333 yards Renteria. Maddon had a sippi State remains the No. don’s teammate Jimmy John- Sunday morning. Mount St. and four touchdowns. 781-729 record in Tampa 1 team in the nation. son won the race. Joseph’s won 66-55. Bay over eight years. Monday, November 3, 2014 The Maine CampusneverSports • B5 Men’s basketball stunned by Division III USM

Michael Bailey lead to one, with the score at play, but the Huskies built it their next possession, and led by a monster game out minutes. Contributor 36-35. back up to 66-56 with 6:43 UMaine had an opportunity of third-year forward Till Sophomore guard Zach UMaine began the second remaining. The teams trad- to tie the game up or take the Gloger of Bochum, Germany. Leal led USM in scoring with The University of Maine half with a quick 6-1 run and ed baskets for a while until lead with under a minute left. Gloger scored 23 points and 15 points while also tallying men’s basketball team was remained on top until 13:52 UMaine went on a 7-0 run However, USM second-year pulled down 19 rebounds, seven rebounds, four assists shocked by the University was left in the period when with a little over 6 minutes forward Sam Knight estab- nine of which were offensive. and four steals. USM’s offen- of Southern Maine Saturday the Huskies began a 13-2 lead left to pull the Black Bears to lished possessionmiss and forced He shot 10-16 from the feld sive punch was also aided by evening, losing to the Divi- to turn a 48-43 Black Bear within three. But once more, third-year Black Bear guard and snagged four steals. Jacob Littlefeld’s 12 points, sion III program 78-73. lead into a 56-50 Huskies ad- USM established a small Shaun Lawton to commit Lawton also played well, and 11 points apiece from The Black Bears started vantage. USM kept the lead cushion of 75-68 with 2:15 to a charge. UMaine got one chipping in 16 points, six re- Sean Caddigan and Alex Fra- fast with a 5-0 and 10-4 run for the rest of the game. play. The Black Bears again more chance to tie or take bounds, three assists and two ser. to start the game. UMaine led UMaine called a time- made a surge, coming with- the lead before USM took the steals. First-year guard Kyle The Black Bears will re- for the entire frst half, but out, cut the lead to four and in two points of the Huskies, two-possession lead and put Little scored 13 points and turn home to host Husson never by enough to pull away. then USM charged again to with the score 75-73, after a the game out of reach, but the recorded three assists. Every University at the Cross Insur- At the end of the half, the pull ahead 61-52 with 7:39 three-pointer from frst-year Black Bears were unable to healthy Black Bear played, ance Center for their second Huskies were able to go on remaining. The Black Bears guard Aaron Calixte. capitalize. and only Calixte, Lawton and exhibition game on Nov. 6 at a run and cut the Black Bear cut it to 63-56 with 7:00an to The Huskies missed on The issueBlack Bears were Gloger played longer than 30 7 p.m. Walsh Thomas, Ryan due for strong showings from B3 “The foundation of our pro- Cody Lachance of the best offseason pick- it’s safe to say you proba- away from being elite. This get and is defnitely worth gram basketball wise will be Contributor ups so far this year as he is bly shouldn’t start him any- week he plays inside the Su- the pickup. If he’s still avail- the way we guard. We like to thriving in the Detroit of- more. Give Ryan one more perdome and I imagine the able in your league, I’d grab play man-to-man. It’s a pres- Here’sbreaking my spin on the fense. Tate plays much larg - newschance to start, but buyer Saints• defense e-mail will show up him and either play himalerts or sure, attack, aggressive, man- week, and as always I claim er than his 5-foot-10-inch beware. and give him fts all day. trade him. to-man defense. We’d like to no responsibility for your frame would lead you to be- Stock Trending Down 3.) Mark Ingram, RB, 2.) Colt McCoy, QB, play a lot of guys, we like to failures, but all the credit for lieve. With Megatron not at 1.) Brandon Marshall, New Orleans Saints: Mark Washington Redskins: play up-tempo… We demand a your successes. 100 percent, look for Tate to WR, Chicago Bears: Bran- Ingram is in fact one of the Does any other QB in the lot out of them on the defensive Stock Trending Up keep being Stafford’s No. 1 don Marshall is starting to better steals of most fantasy league have a better name end, and we give them freedom 1.) Demaryius Thom- option in an offense that is turn back into his diva self. drafts this year. Although than Colt McCoy? I think and confdence on the offen- as, WR, Denver• Broncos: classi�made for shootouts. Throw The Chicagoeds Bears are turn -•he hasmultimedia been banged up this not. McCoy had a solid sive end.” The Broncos offense is a in the fact he’s home this ing into a dumpster fre, year, he’s been productive showing against the Cow- UMaine began its season machine and No. 88 is one week on the artifcial turf, and it looks like they might when he’s played. Although, boys, and with RGIII and Saturday night at the Universi- of the most important cogs. and Tate is a borderline check out anytime soon. this week he goes against a Kirk Cousins you never ty of Southern Maine, dropping Thomas has put up crazy WR1. Although he’s still a must- San Francisco front seven know who will get hurt or the exhibition contest, 78-73. numbers and has scored me 3.) Matt Ryan, QB, At- play, I would consider him that is getting better by the benched in any given week. The Black Bears play a number a ton of points in my PPR lanta Falcons: Matty Ice more of a WR2/3 instead of week with the return of key In deep leagues, McCoy is of games, mostly away, before league that gives bonuses has looked melted this year the dominant WR1 he has players like Patrick Willis, worth a pickup I think as conference play begins on Jan. for different yardage goals. as his Atlanta Falcons are been the past few years. NaVorro Bowman and Al- he’s shown he can fll in 3 at the University at Albany. This week he takes on a once again looking like a 2.) Colin Kaepernick, don Smith. Be wary of In- when he needs to. Coach Walsh is optimis- Raiders team that looks like team destined for a high QB, San Francisco 49ers: gram this week. 3.) Pittsburgh Defense: tic about the campaign and they’llAll be tanking forat either draft pick. But, this week he Man, if Kaepernick had half Week 2 Waiver Wire (Enter witty comment on his time at the University of Amari Cooper or Marcus takesmaine on a team that is going a brain, he’d be thecampus best Pickups how the Jets stink.com on of- Maine, even after only being Mariota. Thomas is a must- to pick even higher than the QB in the league without 1.) Doug Baldwin, WR, fense.) Seriously though, part of the program for a few start. Falcons in the Tampa Bay question. But unfortunately, Seattle Seahawks: No you guys should know to months. 2.) Golden Tate, WR, Buccaneers. If Matt Ryan he always seems to make Percy? No problem! Doug start any defense that’s play- “It feels terrifc to be here. Detroit Lions: Mega-who? can’t get it going against head-scratching decisions Baldwin has turned into ing either the Jets or the Jag- The energy is fantastic. It’s re- Golden Tate has been one this terrible defense, I think for a team that is a solid QB Russell Wilson’s No. 1 tar- uars by now. ally exciting,” Walsh said. The Maine Campus is hiring!

The student newspaper of the University of MainePositions is looking available to add include: experienced photographers to its staff. Interested studentsAssistant are encouraged News to Editor contact Photo EditorOnline Alessandra editor Lewis at [email protected], Nationalor on FirstClass. Advertising Representative Design Assistant

All positions paid. E-mail a letter of interest, résumé and samples of your work to [email protected].

SATURDAY & SUNDAY NOVEMBER 8 & 9 TICKETS AT CollinsCenterForTheArts.com 207-581-1755 • BOX OFFICE B6 • Sports The Maine Campus Monday, November 3, 2014